READINGS IN PHILIPPINE HISTORY By NICOLAS ZAFRA PROFESSOR OF HISTORY UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES Revised Edition ""- UN IVE RSI TY OF THE PHILIPPINl:-S OUEZON CITY, 1956 READINGS IN PHILIPPINE HISTORY ( NICOLAS ZAFRA, Prcfes30r of History University of the:: Philippines -~-- - 0 - - - - - NEv.T EDITION UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES l\1ANILA, 1956 . RIGHTS RESERVED • ·----------- p. 22 W• line 4 36 - II 7 39 - ii ~- 41 - t! 35 II 17 Ii 2 11 su:cvivorf.), 11 not ;isu.rvisors 1i 11 17 11 fo11rtb. 11 not "fourtn 41+ 46 47 .. l+G - f ootnot C) 2, line 7 - 59 61 71 - line 15 II 6 Ii 22 11 an 11 not 11 1556 ;i not ;r1552 11 l H 82 ··· :foot.note 3, l:ine 11 -· 11 - 88 - 97 line Ii 25 11 II 11. ·-11 ... fl 26 109 - H 23.,.25 109 - Ii 30 120 ~ 123 148 - 155 155 11 not rrao 17 com1:1odi:t~y-, 11 not ;1 coumidity" sun 17 surnH not '.11 omit the [,enten<:(:), 11 11 _:.nd a 12 I! 17 last line ii 27 17 of those who die ••• 17 :nytholo~:.Y, 11 not ;1rne;tho lop:yn line 30 line - t!Ti' !7 h" •.., i 0.1. at, 109 - footnote J., line 1 - - r.ot 8 103 111+ .:md 0 HfJonti st P.ban ;i not nsatisteban 11 lif;ip)lt 85 11 n sp0ken, 11 not :r Dpokcm i; -2- 157 - line 1 r1circumstance, n 162 - ii 6 add 165 II 38 165 - 11 It, 11 not that 11 after not 11 11 11 sum 11 liJfll 43 176 ff 15 177 - ii 1 Hencomienda, 178 - . II 2 add 185 - II 11 11 Islands, 11 o,, l OU fl 9 11 gates, not agaves 11 1! 11 add "andY after 206 - 18 11 pepper, 210 - 32 11 merchanclise, 228 - 29 - 194 - circimstancen "rewards, 11 ri not are,:;,.,rcl. s 11 not Hencomiendas 11 17 for 11 after 11 11 not not 11 personsH a Islans 11 11 11 Spanishn papper 11 not H 11 merchanduse 11 271+ - footnote 2, line 7 - Hcontrary, 275 - line 29 285 - footnote ( second to the last line) - Hdecrees, 11 not 11 those, r1 not 11 11 contrarty" not Hwhose;i iidecreed 11 299 - 291 lines 9-10 line 6 312 - ii 14, 318 - I! 7 338 - 341 351 339 353 - omit ;, surrendered 11 llHistoria ••• , rr not rtHistorica" 2nd to last line "vengeance, II not 11 veangeance 11 "condition, 11 conditon 11 - 11 Real, ii 11 not not 11 head 11 5 - riprogress," not 11 pr ogres 11 ii 1/+ - omit "byli after 11 rendered 11 ii 3 - 11 71 13 - l!Jf, line that,ri not nwha_tii 11 not 11rtn -3362 - Line 385 - II 16 390 - 12 390 - II 22 392 - ii 9 11 panave1t ,Sturgis, •1 not "Stur:::i_ssn i1·1,C1PJ~1'ng i.J1....,._,, 1_..,, r1·ot . J f\' iiJ'r.:,r:>r•·;ncrfl v(...i. • • _ U - - (5th froEt lt:[~t line) ( li,th f1--u1n last line) 423 - line - ii 1+29 -- 1t 433 - 11 11 fact' 1 12 419 0 ri 4:~O i1 ('Ith frorn last line) - add ;rw;~r, 11 ,?fter 401 - line 403 not 11 2S 388 - 399 ripamave, 3 non, 11 3 - 11 L.) 26 - p ,-, ·" ' L - - - • ..l,.~.i.::.J.• - 11 11 no·t 11 not lu-· .1.·1 "~ ; , H tanlee., not 71 no 11 howitzers, !i not o·u·•r'·'nteP.~ --~ . c:;., .., l.:. ' n ·, r ·i ·~ II not 11 hot it zer s 11 11 .''.':> 'Ytl"lI'enteed" _. c... -· fl rn l' ,-.u1 P, r :> 1-) J 8 1? l.J. ~., .... i . ~ , , . ) , / , • • ,_ ,.J i1 tailo,s;; 7 436 4~-4 - fi rr h47 - 451 - It 1+51 - Ii 4 ") r.,::, - line 11 not n after 11 c:ohu11" 14 - not a1 :-)i,:t ::1tr·ec~ 1 .,,i 111 piastru, r, 11 fr,mc, 11 orphan, 11 not rrorph::tnc" () 14 .,. n ;1 not 11 :f:'rac: 1 footnote, lino 453 457 add {3rd from lnt;t 1:.ne) .. 1ocollcge, ,; no~ :1J.'olle?ge 11 4h9 455 r ) ,,')4 r, ?O n 6 11 nverturE;t::," not ;rovertunres 11 it-·1,,·,.ou""i..J' 11 no1·- n.;oJ',)v.,.,.,., J • ,, L •..; . J ,I 1•• ·-4p. 11-58 - line l,.66 468 465 469 - II 27 11 pirouettes, 19 11 pesos, 11 Girls', II not ;;Gir 1 r sr1 last line line 15 - ii not 11 per so s 17 nwhere in 1872,H not -· (3d paragraph, 6th line) 469 - ( not npirouttes" il "rd::;ecl, ;1 not rayed" 11th line) - 11 'where 1871 11 1 17 concession, ii not "succession 11 471 - line 7 11 constituent, SIX, ii not 11 consotituentn 481 - i7 1 11 - 11 3 oCTit 557 .. iY 17 11 Fort,n not "Forst" - Ii 25 11 0s, ii 31 °virtudes, n not ii 10 Nevr parac;raph beginf; with 483 580 580 581 - H 0 0 not 11 SEVENrt on" after not 11 11 Affaira es 11 11 vitudes 11 666 - footnote, line 4 - Period after 11 11 Uninformed 11 Cabinet 11 -iiBrief accounts in the form of summaries of leading events of various periods of Spanish history have been included to enable the student to understand nore clearly the nature and significance of events in the Philippines and their relationships to contemporary events in Spain an,d in Europe. I wish to express hereby my e;rc1.titnde to many of my former students and to friends and colleagues who, in one way or another, helped me in the pr1=!paration of the Rgaging§_. I wish to tr1ank particularly Miss Jes efa IVi. Saniel who gave much of her time and offort to the reading of the proofs. N. ZAFRA University of the Philippines Nov emb er, 1947 -i- PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION Readin:2:s in Philir:mine History has been prepared meet the-needf'o·r~r88d.ing materials of students who tab the course, History 5, glven in the first two years oft College of Liberal Arts. This course takes up the history of the Philippines from Magellan' s voyase of discov to the outbreak oi' tbe PldJ.ippine Revolution. Not ever: thing in this period, ho~9ver, is considered. The gene~ outlines of the history cf this period, as well as the main events and personalities of Philippine history, are presumed to be quite farr1~:_1i::',:.' to tl;.os e who enroll in this 1 course. Main intE-3rE,st :.f? di:i.'E,ctr-d to a few selected facts, incidents and epLsodes of this period nnd these are studied on the basis of matE-;riaJ.s gathered fr'om vario\ sources, primary a:1d secondary. It is hoped that, in this1 way, the student not only will acquire a fuller knowledge of the subjects studied, bu.t e1lso may gain famili'.3.rity wit and appreciation of, the vast store house of materials from which a history of the Phili:ppines may be written. Moreover, throt,gh frequent handlin13 and analyzing of some of these rnateriDls, the student may gain valuable ex-1 perience and training in the application of the principles and methods of historical criticism. The ft.§JidJ.-r-:.g_s_ is not designed to supply the needs of the historical r·9S()archeJ' or investigator. The latter will have to explore the vast field of Philippine historical lite:1rature itself, using as guides such bibliographical aids as Rotana 1 s Aoara t,o B::i.bJ. ior:rafic o. Rob ertcon r s Biblio-' 1-.,.r of o-y,•cin ~."':,L,_ tn;:,:,'..,.,.,3:..Dl,,, · -,T,Dl'}P Tc.·] ·,r;(1C~ " r1r, T-ovura's B'"'] ic,·-e~a __ ;;.,~.-:::~·;_.;;:°.J;;:.Jh,..,.,.::.....~ ... -'?,,;_·:..,.;....~.. ' v _-1;_~_::,.__.. ...~--~ Fi.lipind., 'l'r!e 5.eadj.n.~s is intended mainly to meet an urg e::-it and imperative need ,9.r;is ing from the inadequacy the facilities of our libraries in the way of handy and convenient collections of historical sources suitable a1 proper for our purpose. I Q..;~.J:..-.. • ·-_...,_,;..1... • -. ,,...-,,._., ,. .. •,.n·--,o..-. .,. .• ,,_ _ _ _ _ ,.~... . . - - . - . - 1..)_ ., ...- ~ 1 Cl. U. •-. a I Cl Most of the :materials contained in the Readings ha been takEm from the 55-volume collection, ThePtII'}.jj_rine Is1ang_§., compiled and edited ,by Emma H. BJ.air and James , Robcirtson, and published by the Arthur H. Clark Co., Clev land, U. S. A. This is the most complete and extensive compilation of Philippine source materia.J.s in English so far produced. Spne of the materials in the Read,t_ngs, ho' ever, have been drown from sour-ceo outside of Blair and Robertson's The Phi1i.n~Jine Islands. Th,2re are a few c ~ ments which, as L1ras I know, have not appea.red in a1 \work -in English translations before this time. 4 -iii- PREFACE TC THE NEW EDITION In this new cdi tion of the Readin2:s- in Phil ippinc Historv:, many cl1;;-u1ges have been introduced. Apart from numerous corrections, irrprovement2 and additions throughout the text, chringeE, were made in some of tLe documents which uppcD1·cd -i_r1 ti:'ifJ precr:;ding edition. Some docurients ha'1e brcn ordttecl aJtogether. In-tho case of other documents, pas:-rnges ha;ie been 1 c;ft out for the sake of brevity. In their a bbrcvia.+~ccl forms, ho111 ever, the latter still retain their e:Jsenti2l character and value as sources of bi~'ltoric:al information. These ch2ng0s have been made to mo.k e pos,3ibl e the addition. of new mc1terial without increabiw_:i: too much th8 volume of the new edition • Notable among the new features of tho present edition are the material bearinp: on the life and works of Rizal• Thes 8 hav G been add,ed. in view of the enactment of Republic Act No. 1425, popularly known 1s th8 Rizal bill. The lav; provid E~s for the giving of courses on th~ life, works and writings of Rizal as a part of the curricula of all schools, colJeges and universities of tl1e Pnl.lip:_Jines, public and priv2te. Such c0urs es -are ner-:;d ed, according to th\~ spomwrs of the measure in Congress, to imbue the 7<.mth of the country with the ideals of freedom and nationalism of Rizal. The new material on Rizal in the Rendirnrn will, it is hoped, contribute in some way to the .fulfilJmcnt of the aims and objeclives of the law. Select passages from well known works of Rizal have been included in the nrE':sent edition to enable the student in the course in PLilippine history to acquire a clearer undorstandin~ and a better appreciation of Rizal and of his place and significance in the history of the Philippines. A new chapter, the last, has also been added in the Readinp:s. Under t.110 title, "Philippine Independence in the Now Age", the cba.pt(~r is intended to serve as a fitting epilogue to the story of the Philippine Revolution. It t L~lls of the c ontir:.uo ticn, durinv the American regime, of the independence strugrde ·which was sta:::--ted by the lCatipunan Society under Andres Bonifacio in August 1896. -iv- I am grateful to all my colleagues in the Department -of History w]·10 have rendGred valuuble assistance, in one form or another, in the~ prepc1r,Jtion of the present edition. I v-rish to thank in particular, Dr. Guadalupe Fores-GRnzon, Professor Josefa M. Saniel, MiE3ses Justina A. Saltiva and Donc1ta Taylo, l'ilr. i,u.rsulio ;3. Estani::,lao Jr., 1\I ' Al.i,)_,r r-, t.,) C', . 1101a_e,.), rv: .. , . J . r,.'[.r .... CJ ,cc.1r IvT ·'' -·1 ,, . 1\/f L eo 1,.Jo ld o rr. 1-. ..,. i.·: 1 JUL.,.,l), 1',.r. TI. Serrano, ;_mcl. J'/[if3S Flordcliza Vicent(:o, C C' DcpartmeQt of History lJ ._J.V ll • e r,,1 r, • t'y -.,... ·t· h. ,, p 1,.uL.J. • ] _• r)!)l.i18,_, u_._ 1 Di1irn.r:m, Que::;on City Decem1)er, 1956 C) O • :::, C-' ·:. TABLE OF CONTENTS PART o:tJE -· DISCOVERY aND COLONIZATION Chapter One - Background of Magellan's Voya:I,c of Discovery 1. Introductory Survey • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2. Pope Alexanc~er VI 's Bull arnter Cs.etera 11 • • • • • • 3. The Treaty of Tord2slllas • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 4 7 Chapter Two - The Magellan Expedition 1. Pigafettc2 's Account of the Expeo.it ion ••••••••• 12 2. Transylvanus Ace ount of the Magellan Expec:ition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Chapter Three - Later Attempts At Colo:aization 1. The Loaisa Expetlition ••.•••••••••••••••••••••. 2 • The _S2c1vecli--a Ex~eclition ..................•.... 3. The T :re J ·0 3r of i~ c1 r a 6 oz a . • . . . o • • • o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4. The Ville: lobos E:xpe di tion ••••••••••••••••••••• 5 • The Leg2zpi Expedition •.•••••••••••••••••••••• 46 49 52 55 61 Chapter Four - Early l7il5.pino Civilization 1. Morga 's -~,1cesos de le?..!? Islas F:LJJpinas • • • • • • • 8),. 2. Loarco's Relac~6n d0 las Irlas Fj_lip~_nas ••••• 106 3. Plasencia r-;; i 1Las Costunibre:::i de los Tai,alos 11 • • • 11$ ... 1+.• Col_in 's Labor EvangeJ.ic a •••••••••••.••••••••• 132 PART T"u!O - Tm~ FIRST CcJ\JTUR.Y Qli' SPAJ'JIS H RULE Chapter One - Spain and the Philippines ir1 ·c.~1e 16th and 17t:,l1 Centuries ........................... 167 Chapter Two - Mo"'.",:;G. on ·the Eorly Years o::° Spanish Rule •• 18'5 Chapter Three - EcclesiG stical Fatroru ,·:2 in the Indies •• 213 Chapter Four - Ecclesiastical Affairs L1 the 16th and 17th Centuries 1. Creation of the Diocese of Manila •••••••••••• 224 2. Origin of the Privileres 3njoyed by the Frid r's i~1 t.:,1~e Ir1d ies ...................... 227 3. Incidents of the Diocesan Controversy •••••••• 229 -vi- Chapter Five - The Early Provinces • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 235 Chapter Six -- Spanish Commercial Policy 1. Laws Regardinr:: Navi2;ation and Commerce • • • • • • • • 2. Memorial of Juan Grao y Monfalcon ••••••••••••• 244 255 PART THREE - THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY Chapter One - Spain in the 18th Century Chapter Two - The Manila-Acapulco Trade ... ....... .. .. .. • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • Chapter Three - The British Occupation of Manila • • • • • • • 261 272 279 Chapter Four - Filipinc Revolts During t.hG 18th Century - 1. The 1745-46 Uprisings .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 292 2. Revolts During the British Occupation • • • • • • • • • 298 Chapter Five - Ecclesiastical Affairs, 1767-1776 1. The Question of the Curacies Durin0 the Times of Santa Justa and Governor Anda • • • • • • • • • 2. The Expulsion of the Jesuits • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 313 320 ':IT'fua:pter Six - GovGrnor Basco's AdministrEition 1. Bascovs Plc.ms and. Policies •••••••••••••••••... 2. The Tobacco Monopoly •••.••••••••.•.••••••••.•• 3. The Real Compafiia de Filipinas ••••••••••.••••• Chapter Seven - The Philip-pines lest h Century 325 329 331 At The Clos(~ of the 1. The Governnent of the Philippines • • • • • • • • • • • • • .2. The Provinces •••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••.•••••••• 3. Social Life - Manners and Customs • • . • • • • • • • • • • J40 353 357 \ PART FOUR - POLITIC1LL' ECONm:rc AND CULTURAL PH OGRESS 1800-:187; Chapter One - Philip~ine Representation in the Spanish Cortes 1. European :3ackground of Philippine RGDresent a ti on •• o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • o . . . . . . . . . Cl ••••••• -vii- 2. The Philippines and the Cortes of 181C-181J ••• 371 J. The Constitution of Cadiz •..•.••.••.••••••••• 1'74 .., l 4. The IJ.ocos Revolt, Hn4-1815 ................ . 377 5. The Cortes of 1$20-1823 •••.••.••••••••••••••• 379 6. The Cortes of 183/+-1[;37 •••.•.•.......••.•• · • • 382 Chapter Two - :Material Pron-r()SS 1. Regidor-l',fu.sonr s Account on Philippine Commercial Prcrress ••••••••.••••••••••••••• 388 2. Economic c1.nd Soci-11 1(r,sul t::., er" the O~cning of the PhilippirH:s to Foreign Nations (a) Economic and Social Development •..••••• Ji,04 (b) Commercial and Ao.::riculturel Progress .•• 406 (c) 'social and Political Results •• ~ ••.•..• l.i,C~ ' ' ,-i i J. Other Aspects of Philippines Material Progress (a) Improvement of Communication F'c.1ciJ.itj_es . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . · • • · • J.i-1, ... (b) Campaigns Against Piracy . . . 41t . . .. .. . . Chapter Three - Provincinl and Municipal Reforms 1. Defects o.f the· Administrative System ••••...•• 424 2. The Rofprn Decree of 1844 .............•.....• 436 J. 'Ihe Provi.nc es AbclJt the Middl s of · thri 19th ---C er1 t ur :;:r • • • • • • • • " • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •~ • • • •••••• 4. The Municipal Reform Decree o.f lt47 •..•.....• Chapter Four - Educatiorwl Reforms 1. Educational and Cultural Conditibns about the :viicldl e oE th0 19th Century ..•••••••••• 4 2. The Educational Decree of 1g63 •........••... ~ 3. Other Notable El~ucationa1 DEvel.orments ••••••• L 466 Chapter Five - The Spanish Revolution and Its Results 1. Bae kg round of the Hevol ution 2. Effects Upcn the PhiJ.ippinE.~s Chapter Six - The Cavite Affair of .................. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ~-69 478 1872 1. Background of the Cavite Affair •..•••.••••••• 483 2. The Cc1vi te Affair :rnd Its Results •••..••••••• 499 PART FIVE - THE LAST YEARS OF SPANISH RULE Chapter One - Spain, 1871-1898 ....................... .. Chapter Two - The Spanish Colonial Administration ••••• Chapter Three - Reforms Granted to the Philippines 1. The Tax Reform of l88L1- •.•••••••••••••••••• : •• 2. The Provincial He.form of 1886 ...•..••...•...• 3. The Reform DecreE: of 1885 ......•.•••••.....•. 4. The Extension of the Spanish Codes ••••••••••• 5. The Royal Order of November 12} 1Ss9 ........ . 6. The B.oyal Decree of Hay 1 7, 1893 ............ . 7. Suppression of the Tobacco Monopoly ••••••••.• Chapter Four - The Propaganda Campaign 1. Rizal as a Propagandist .••..••••••••••••••.•• 2. La Solidaridad ..•..••..•••••••••••••••••••••• J. The PetitioP of 1888 and the Calamba Episode •• 4. La Liga Filipina •••••••..•••••.••••••••••••.• Chapter Five - The Philippine Revolution 1 • Tl:-1e Ka ti'iJu11an ..... ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 2. The Philippines on the Eve of the Revolution ..................................... . 3. Outbreak of the PlJil ippine Revolution •••••••• Chapter Six - Philippine Independence in the New Age ••• ----o:o---- PAHT ONE DISCOVERY AND COLONIZATION CHAPTER ONE :a,ACKGROUND OF MAGELLAN' S VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY 1. Introductory Survey The voyage of Magellan to, the Philippines, one of the great accomplishments of Spain in early modern times, was an event of the reign of Ch~rles I. (1516-1556) •1 It ranks in historical importance with Columbus' voyage to· the New World in 1492 and Vasco da Gama's voyage to India in 149S. These voyages. were the prelude to that great event of early modern times which history writers refer to as the Commercial Revo- lution. From the standpoint of Spanish national history, the voyages of Columbus and Magellan were the sequel of an impor-. tant event which took place in the Spanish Peninsula in the 1 - Charles I was the son of Mad Joan ( Juana la Loca), daughter .of Ferdinand and Isabella, and Philip, the Handsome ( el Hermosa), son of ¥1aximilian of Austria, Emperor of the Hol-y Roman Empire. Besidcf; being King of Spain, he was Emperor Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire. He was elected Emperor of the E:rnpire shortly after his accession to the Spanish throne. . A descendant of the Hapsburgs of Austria,. Charles I founded the Spanish Hapsb~rg dynasty which ruled Spain for nearly two hundred years. The other Spanish Hapsburgs were Philip II (1556-1598}, Philip III (1598-1621), Philip IV (1621-1665) and Charles II (1665-1700). -2later Middle Ages. This was the union through marriage of two of the then leading states in the Peninsula, the kingdom On October 14th, of Castilla.-Leon and the kingdom of Aragon. 1469, Princess Isabel of Castilla-Loon was betrothed to Ferdinand, · heir to the throne of Aragon. This event signal- ized the culmination of the centuries-old process of national evolution which had been in progress in the Peninsula and in which the small independent Cr1ristian otntes in Spain were united and consolidc:ited into bigger states and kingdoms. The ultimate outcome of' this process was the emergence of l-:'fodern Spain, destined to play a leading role in European affairs in early modern times. Under Ferdinand and Isabella (1474-1516), frequently ~ ' referred to by Spanish 1f,lr1t. 0..r~_,:'l.r1 J;,o:=1 .R.ffVG.S... C®nl_j..c.os., t ..rv:'. · new Spain, following the example of Portugal, emb0.rk<)rl uJ,ol\ the task of finding a new trade route to the countries of the Far East. The need for such a route was keenly felt at that time throughout Western Europe. For the old trade rqutes over which the riches of the Orient, from immemorial time, found their -way to Europe, no longer Yc)r'Oved adequate --...------- and ~~tisfactory. For one thing, the Mediterranean Sea, over which the goods from the East were carried to Western Europe, was con\I:oll-ed by the maritime city states of Italy• Because of their favorable geographical situation in relation -3to the terminals of the old trade routes, the merchants of the Italian city states had a decided advantage over the merchants of Western Europe in the international competition for control and domination of the trado with the East. Be- sides, the countries in the eastern Mr3diterranean, where the old trade routes had their terminals, wore gradually falling into the hands of· Moslem Powers. Portugal pioneered in the task of finding new routes to the countries of the East. Under the patronage and en- couragement of Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460), Portuguese sailors undertook voyages of discovery and exploration along the Atlantic coast of Africa. Princfa Henry did not live long enough to see the roalization of the Portuguese dream of reaching the East by a direct all water route. However, the project that he had started was carried on by the Portuguese with undiminished zeal. In 1486, Bartholo- mew Diaz reached the southernmost tip of Africa. tuguese called the place "Cape of Good Hope, 11 The Por- a name chosen to express their undying faith in the ultimate success of their undertakings. Twelve years later, they had the great satisfaction of seeing their dream come true. In 149£5, Vas co da Gama sailed into the harbor of Calicut, India, bringil}g to a successful conclusion one of the most memorable voyages in early modern times. At last a direct all- -4watElr route to the East had been found which could give traders from Western Europe freedom ::rnd immunity frcm interference or control on the part of the marit,ime city states of Italy and the Moslem states in Western Asia. It was; however, to the Spnin of Ferdinand and IGabella that the honor belongs of accomplishing the first truly epoch making voyage of modern times. Six years before Vasco da Gama accomplished his memorable voyage, Chrictophor Columbus, sailing under the flag of Spain, and, following a bold plan of his own to get to the countries o·f Eastern Asia, h.ad successfully crossed the Atlantic Ocean and had come upon a new world, (1492), 2, Pope Alexander VI's Bull nrnter Caetera". Columbus' achievement gave rise to misunderstanding and controversy between Spain and Portugal. For it was gen- erally believed. then that the world was much smaller than its actual size and that Columbus had reached islnnds off the eastern coast of India. Portugal contended that Columbus had gone into reeions which at that time wero being discovered and explored by her own navigators. To settle the controversy bet-ween Spain and Portue;al, Pope Alexander VI issued in 1493 a papal bull establishing a line of demarcation between the areas assicned for dis- -5covory and exploration to the rulers of these states. The YVInter Caetera, r; 4, 1493. following: 1 Important portions of the document are the May as this document is known, was promulgated Arnone other works well pleasing to his divine llf.aj csty and cherished of our heart, this assuredly ranks highest: that in our times especially the Catholic faith and the Christian law be exalted and overywh.ere increased :.crnd sp:tead •.• Wherefor o, recognizing that as true Catholic kings and princes such as we have always known you to be, and as your illuf;trious deeds already known to almost t, he whole worJ.d declo.re, you not only eagerly desire but with every effort, zeal, and diligence, without regard to hardships, expenses, dangers, with the shedding even of your blood, are laboring to that end; thnt besides you have already long ago dedicated to this purpose your whole soul and all your endeavors, as witnessed in these times with so much glory to the divine name in your recovery of the kingdom of Granada from the yoko of the Moors, we therefore not unrichteously hold it as our duty to grant. you even of our own accord and in your .favor those things whereby daily and with heartj_er effort you may be enabled .for the honor of God himself and- the spread of the Chrj_stian rule to accomplish your saintly and praiseworthy purpose so pleasing to immortal God. In sooth we have learned that according to your purpose long ago you were in quest of some far-away islands and mainlands not hitherto discovered by othors, to the end that you might bring to the wors:1ip of our Redeemer and the profession of the Catholic faith tl1e inhabit:rnts of them; ••• thc1.t with the wish to fulfill your desire, you chose our bel - Blair & Robertson, The Philippine Islands, vol. 1, pp. 97 ff. In subseguont citations, BJ.cdr and Robertson, The Philippine Islands, will be referred to by the abbreviated form, B. & R. -6loved son, Christopher Colon, ••• to make diligent quest for these far-away, unknown mainlands and islands through the sea, where hitherto no one has sailed; who in fine, with di.vine aid, nor without the utmost di1i 6 ence, sailing in the Ocean Sea discovered certain very far-away islands and even mainlands th:it hitherto had not bean discovered by others... Wherefore, as becoming to Catholic kings and princes, after earnest consideration of all matters, especially of the rise and spread of the Catholic faith, you have purposed with the favor of divine clemency to bring unde:)r your sway tho said mainl&nds E,.nd island;3 vdth their inhabitants 2.nd 7-he dw8llers therein, and · br;i.ng them to the Catholic f,1ith. ~. By tenor of these pros ents, we do give, gr&nt, and assign to you and you:;:' heirs and successors, kings of Castile and Leon, forever, together with all thoir dominions, cities, camps, places, c:;.nd towns as well as all rights, jurisd:i. ctions, 2.ncl appurtenances, all isl2nds 2nd m2inlands found E:nd t-'.) be found, dis covered and to be discoverod towards the west and south, by drawing and 9stablishing a line; from the Arctic pole, nr.-'l.mely the north, to t:.ie Antartic pole, namely the south, no matt.er whethor tho said mainlands and islands are found and to be found in the direction of India or towards any other quarter, the said line to the west. and south to be distant one hundred leagues from any of the is-· lands commonly known as the Azores and Cc:.:i.to Verde-. With this proviso however that none of the islands and ma.inland,s found and to be found, discovorcd and to be discoverec: bevond that said line towards the 1,wst and south, b;.3 in tlic actual possession of any Cllristian kinF; or i'):.:ince up to the birth duy o.f our Lord: Jesus Christ ju2t pa.st in the present year o".1e thousand four hnr:id:cr;d and ninoty threP. Mol.·"eOVP."" ,.·ov -Yil" 1,e 'l~lPO ·1' 1·1./-· et ~ nd de_,_ i._- ..... -. pute you and your sE :j.d J.1c-)::l.rs anc s11.ccesr;ors owners of them with .full and freo powcir, authority, and jurisdiction of every kind; with this proviso however that throue;h th:i.s gift, g:rant, and assignment of ours no ri.f:i;ht conferred on any Ch:r·istian prince, who mny be in actual possession of said is1u.nds cJ.nd muinl,111ds up to the said birthday of our Lord Jesus Christ, j_s nureby to be consider8d as ·withdrawn or to be wit·,hdrawn, More._ • ..,,..,. 1 Vv C!, ,l_ ' C V V -7over we command you in virtue of holy obedience that, cmployin:::; all due diligence in the premises, a,s y0i..,1_ promise, nor do we doubt your compliance therein to the best of your loyalty and royal greatness of spirit, you send to the said aforesaid mainlands and islands worthy, Godfearing, learned, skilled, and experienced men, in order to instruct. the aforesaid. inhabitants and dwellers therein, in the Catholic faith and train them in good morals ••• 2. Treaty of Tordesillas King John of Portugal did not find quite satisfactory the arrangement established by the Pope. He felt that the demarcation line established by the Papal Bull was not far enough to the west to- include regions which, by reason of prior discovery and exploration by Portuguese navigators, properly belonged to Portugal. line be moved farther to the west. He demanded that the The Portuguese demand was taken up in a conference of Portuguese and Spanish commissioners held at Tordesillas in l/i..94. - In that con- ference the Treaty of Tordesillas "fas concluded, June 7, 1494. Important portions of the Treaty al'e the following: 2 Whereas, a certain controversy exists between the said lords as to what lands, of all those discovered in the Ocean Sea pertain to each one of the said parts respectively; there~ fore, for the sake of peace and concor6, and for the preservation of the relationship and love of the said King of Portugal for the said _,________ 2 - ~- -8King and Queen of Castilla, Aragon, etc., they, their s&id represcmtativos, acting in their rwme and by virtue of their powers herein described, covenanted and agreed that a boundary or straight line be determined and drawn north and south, from pal~ to pole~ on the said Ocean Seu --- from the Artie to the Antarctic pole. ?r..is boundary, or line shall be JrEiW11 straLr,Lt, as aforesaid, at a di::,tanco of three hundrnd .s.nd seventy 1 eagues west of the Caba Verde islands, being ca:culated by deg1~ees, 01· by L,ny other r:1.e.n.ner.f as :nay be considered the best and readiest, provided the distance shall be no 2:rei1ter than above said. And all lands, both i;ldnds and mainlands, found and discove~od alr0adyi or tote found and discovered hereafter by the said Kin[,; of Portugal and by his vessels on this side of the said line and bound determined as above, toward the east, in either no:::-th or south latitude, on t:1e eastern side of the said bound, provided the said bound is not crossed, shall belong to, and remain in the poss2ssion of, and pertain forever to the said King of Portugal .:J.nd his succosso:i.... :.=;. And all other lands --- bo-:-h islancis and ma:.i.nJands, found or to be found her ea ft er, d:Lscover·ec: or to be discovered herenfter, whi~~ have been discoVGrcd or sh2lJ. be discovered bv the said King and Queen of Ca.3tilla, Ara9:;on, eteJ~, ~tr1d by their vessels, on the w2stern side of the said bound, deter~ined as above, after hRving passed the said bound toward the west, in either its no~th or south latitude, shc,11 bolcng tc, and remo.in in possession of, and pertGin forever to tho said King and QuGon of Castilla, Leon, otc,, and to their successors ••• Yten: In order that the said line o~ bound of the ~sc::id division may be made straight &nd as ready as possible the suid distance of three :iundr2d c1nd seventy 1 eagues west o.f the Cc;bo Verde isla,1ds, .'.ls l1.e1~einbefore sJca.ted, the sc=.:id repre$ertatives of both the said parties acree and assent that wi.thin the ten months irnrnedir1.tely following the date of tills t:c8c:,ty, thEdr said const ituer.t J.ords sb.all despatch t°\JO or four en ravels. Thasc vessels shall meet at the island o.f Grande Ca:1aria ( Grand Canary IsJ.n.nd), during this time~ and each one of the said parties shall send cert&in persons in them, to wit, pilots, astrologers, sai.lors, and any others they may deem desirable. But there must be 8S many on one side as on the other, and cert&in o~ the said pilots, astrologers, sailors, and others of those sent by the said King and Queen of Castilla, Aragon, etc., and who are experienced, shall embark in the ships of the said lCing of Portwi;al anet t11e Algarbes; inlike manner certain of the s1.id persons sent by the said Kine; of Portugal shall embark in the ship or ships of the said King and Quee:1 of C.::wtilla, Aragon, etc.: a like number in each case, so that they may jointly study and examine to better advantage the sea, courses, winds, and the degroes of the sun or of north latitude, and lay out the leagues aforesaid, in order t.hat, in determining the 1 ine and boundary, all sent and empowered by both the said parties in the said vessels, shall jointly concur. These said vessels shall continue their course to2:ether to the said Cabo Verde islands, from whence Ehey shall lay a direct course to the west, to the distance of the said three hundred and seventy degrees, measured 3.S the said persons _shall agree, and measured without prejudice to the said parts. When this point is reached, such point ·;,,iill constitute tl1e plo.ce and mark for measuring degrees of the sun or of north latitude eith0r by daily runs measu::.~ed in 1 eogues, or in any other mann-Jr thJ.t sha11 mutually be deor.1ed bettlf;r. This said line shc..11 be drawn north and south as efo~esaid, from the said Arctic pole to the said Anta:.:·ctic }Jole ~ And when this line ha.s been det9rmined as above said, thos·e sent by the aforesaid parties, to whom each one of the said parties must delegate his own authority and power, to determine the said mark and bound, shall draw up a writing concerning it and affix thereto their signatures. And when deter~ mined by the mutual consent o.:' all of tl1em, this line shall be consider2d forAver as a perpetual mark and bound, in Sl.1ch wise that the said parties, or either of them, or their future successors, shall be unable to deny it, 01· erase or remove it, at any time or in an:r manner whatsoever. ---: 0: _.;.. _ -10- CHAPTER TWO THE :MAGELLAN EXPEDITION The Treaty of Tordesillas gav~ Spain the right to ven;.. ture into the unexplored regions of the South Seas as the Pacific Ocean was then called. Spain, however, did not make use of this right until many years later. In the mean- time, Portugal had ;:one to the Eas-s ctncl had started in earnest laying down the foundations of a vast colonial empire in that part of the world. rived at Calicut, India. In 1498, Vas co da Gama ar- In 1509, Albuguerq110 acquired Goa, on the western coast of India, and made it th3 capital of In 1511, Albuquer- Portugal's colonial empire in the East. que captured lVIalac::ca from the Malays. That sa1i1e year he dispatched an expedition in Gearch of the Spice Islands. In 1519, Spain launched an e:{pedi:~ion ol her own to the East. That yeal' Ferdinand Ma'Iellan J.eft the port of Snn Lucar de Barrameda on a voyage cf discovery which eventually took him to the Philippines. The story of the Magellan e:xpcdition is told in two importcmt source documents: Pj_gafette' s account, first published in Italim1 in 1800 under the title, i1 ?rimo viaggio intorno al globo tcrracqueo"; and a letter written in Latin -11- in 1522 by Maximilianus Transyl vanus entitled, 11 De Moluccis Insulis 11 • 1 Pigafettats account was written by an eyewitness of the events related therein. the Magellan expedition. For Pigafetta was a member of He went through the hardships and vicissitudes of the voy~ge and was one of the few among the members of ,the expedition who came bf.lck to Spain alive. He wrote the story of that memorable voy:Jge o.round the world using as his main source of information the copious notes that he had taken down from time to time of things that happened in the course of the voyage. Transylv.::tnus wrote his story on the basis of the testimonies gathered by him from Sebastio.n dGl Cano; the navigator who piloted the Victoria back to Spain in 1522, and from the other survivors of the expedition. Transyl vanus' "De Moluccis Insulisi 1 has a significance of its own in Philippine historical literature. It was the first account to be published in Europe relative to the Philippines. (1) The following is the story, in part, of the Magelian expedition as told by Pigafetta: 1 - Pigafetta's account is in vols. 33, Jh, B.&:, R. Transylvanus' i 1De Moluccis Insulisit is in vol. 1, B.&, R., p. 30 5, .ff. -12- Departure from Spain . On Mondny. morning,. August X, St. La:;4re:r:ice' s Day, 111 the year aboves-11c.;., 2 the fleet, naving been supplied with all the things n0ccsso.ry to the sea, (and counting those of every nationality, we were two hundred and thirty-s ·3ven m.cm), made rea dy to leave the harbor of Siviglia.3 ••• From Sivi.glia to this point (i.e., San ~ucar), it is 17 or 20 leaguas by river. Some dn:rs after, the captain-ceneral, with his other ca~~ains, descended the river in the small boats belonging to th~ir snips. We remained there for a c:JnniderG.ble number of days in order to finish (providing) the fleet with some things that it needed. Every day we w_ent a.shore to hear mass in a village called Nostra Dofla de Baremeda (our Lady of Barrameda), near San Lucar, Before the departure, the captain-general wished all tho--men to confess, and would not allow any woman to sail in the fleet for the best of considerations. We left that village, by name San Luchar, on Tuesday, September XX of thG same yec,r, and took a southwest course. On the 26th of the said month, we reached an island of the Great Can2ria, called 'r eneripno, · , · b 1 ies · · n 1 at:..· t u·ct e o.L-r ,:;,..) c.egrees, wh ic in (landing thore) in order to get flesh, water, and ,vood ••• ,...,r). j Mutiny , 3.t San Julian In tha~ port which we called the port of Santo Julinnno, 1~ we remained about 5 months. IVbny 2 - 15·,J. q.· • 3 - Sevilla. Mag2llan's fleet consisted of the following vessels: Trinid~d (Flagship, 110 tons), San Antonio (120 tons), Concepcion (90 tons), Victoria (85 tons), and Santiago (75 tons). . 4 - This port, located at latitude 49° South on the shores of Argentina, was reached Ma~ch 31, 1520. . After C:i:'ossiag the Atlantic, Mi:1gellnn' s fleet took time exploring the coa.st of South A1nerica. Cape Santo -13things happened there. In order that your most illustrious Lordship may know some of them, it happened that as soon as we had entered the port, tho captains of the other four ships plotted treason in order that they might kill the captaingeneral. Those conspirators consisted of the overseer of the fleet, one Johan de Cartagena; the treasurer, Alouise de Mendosa; the accountant, Anthonio Gocha and Gaspar de Cazada. The overseer of the men having been qunrtered, the treasurer was killed by dagger blows, for the treason was discovered. Somedays after that, Gaspar de Cazadq, was banished with a priest in that land of Patagonia. The captain-,general did not wish to have him killed, because the emperor, Don Carlo, had appointed him captain. • •• At the Strait of Magellan Then going to fifty-two degrees to~-Jard the same pole, we found a strait on the dai (feast of the) eleven thousand virgins (i.e., October 21), whose head is called Capo de le Undici Millia Vergine (i.e., cape of the Eleven Th6usand Virgins) because of that very great miracle. That stro.it is one hundred and ten leguas or 1+40 millas long, and it is one-half legua broad, more or less. It leads to another sea called the Pacific Saa, and is surrounded by very lofty mountains laden with snow. There it was impossible to find bottom (for anchoring), but (it was necessary to fasten) the moorings on land 25 or 30 Agustino on the most eastern headland of Brazil was reached toward the end of November, 1519. Rio de Janeiro was reached on December 13. Leaving Rio de Janeiro on December 26, the fleet proceeded to the estuary of the Rio de la Plata. Here it remained until February. 2, 1520. From the Rio de la Plata IVhgellan sailed to the port of Santo Juliano. Winter had begun and I'-'Tagellan decided to stay there throughout the winter months.. He left port San Julian August 24, 1520. On October 21, 1520, the fleet arrived at the cmtrance to the Strait of Mugellan. -14brazas away. Had it not been for the captaingeneral, we wo~ld not have found that strait, for we all thought and said that it ·wrw closed on all sides. After entering that strait, we found two openings, one to the southeast, and the other to the southwes~.,. We went t,'J ex~lore the other opening toward the sout.hwest. ··Finding, however, the same strait continuously, we came upon a river which we called the river Sardi~e (i.e., Sardines), because there were ma~y sardines near it. So we stayed ther.J for four d&ys. Du.r::.ng that period we sent a ·wt-;11-eciuipped boat to e:xplore the cane o~ the other s6a. The men returned within thr~e days~ and reported that they had SGen the cape· and'the open sea. The captain-general wept for joy, and:called that cape, Cap0 Dezeado (i.e., Desire), for we h&d been desirin6 it for a long time,,. In'order that your most illustrious Lord ship may believe it, when we were in that. strait, the ni 6 hts were only three hours long, arid it was then the month of Octob or. The la.nd on theleft-hand side of that strait turned to~1ard the southeast and was low. We called that strait the strait of Fatagonia. One finds· the safest of ports every hulf legua in it, water, the finest wood (but not of cetj.ar Y, fish, sa::...-·clines,. and· missiglioni, while smullage, a s-weet herb (c.1lthough there is also some that is bitter) grows around the spr~ngs. -We ate of it for mnny days as we had nothin.2: else. I bclievG tha-i:, there is not a more beautiful strait in the world than that one. • •• The Voya·ge· Across the Pacific Wednesday·, 'November 28, 1520, we debouched from that strait, engulfing ourselves in the Pacific Sea. We were three months 1.nd twenty dnys without getting any kind of fresh food. We. ate biscuit, which wa.J no longer biscuit, but powder of biscuits swarming with worms, for they had eaten the good. It s~Gnk s~rong:v of the urine of rats, vfe drank yellow water ·€:1nt had been putrid for many days. We also at8 ~3omo ox hides that covered thG top of the mainyard to prevent -15the yard from chafing the shrouds, and which had become exceedingly hard because of the sun, rain, and wind. We left them in the sea for four or five days, and then placed thr:~m for a few momonts on top of the embers, and so ate thern; and often we ate sawdust from boards. Rats were sold for one-half duc.Jdo apiece, and even ti1cn we could not get them, But above all the other misfortunes the following was the worst. The gums of both the lower and upper teeth of some of our men swelled, so that they could not eat under any circumstances and therefore died, Nineteen ffien died from that sickness, and the giant together with an Indian from the country of Verzin. Twenty-five or thirty men fell sick ( during that time), in the arms, legs, or in cmother place, so that but .few r,:;rnained well. However, I, by the giace of God, suffered no sickness. We sailed about four thousand leguas during tJ:wse three months and twenty days through an open stretch in that Pacific Sea. In truth it is very pacific, for during that time we did not suffer any storm. We $aW no land excopt two desert islets, where we found nothin3 but birds and trees, for which we called them the Ysolle Infortunate (i.e., the Unfortunate Isles). They are two hundred leguas apart. We fo1111d no anchorage, ( but 1 near them saw many :::harks. The first islet lies fifteen degr0es of south latitude, and the other nine. Daily we made runs of fifty, sixty, or seventy leguas at the caten2, or at the stern. Had not God and His blessed mother given us so good weather we would all have died of hunger in that exceeding .vast sea. Of a vor:i.ty I believe no such voyage will ever be made (again). ·Arrival at the· Philippines At dawn on Saturday, March 16, 1521, we came upon a high land at a distance of throe hundred leguas from the islands of Latroni, an island named Zamal (Sa:mar). The following dctY the captain-Joneral desired to land on another island which was uninhabited and lay to the right of the above mentioned isJ.and in order to be more secure and get water and have some rest, He had two tents s~t up on the shore for the sick and -16had o. sow killed for them. On Monday afternoon, March 18, we saw a boat coming toward us with nine men in it. Therefore, the captaingeneral ordered that no one should move or say a word. without his Derrnis~don. When those men reached the shore, their chief went immediately to the captain-general giving sirns of joy because of our arrival. Five of the rr~st ornately adorned of them remained with us, while the rest wont to get some oth,:irs who were fishing, and so thoy all cam,3. The captain-general seeing that they were re:1sonablo men, ordered food to be set before th9m, and gave them red caps, mirrors, combs, bell,s, ivory, bocasine, and other things. ·when they sa-w thn 9aptain' s courtesy, they presented fish, a jar of palm wine, which t hoy call 111:il,_Ca {i.e. arrack), figs more than one palmo J.oni:; IT. e. ban,g,nas), and others which were smaller and more delicate, and two cocoanuts. They had nothing else then, but rnade us signs with their hands that they would bring umay or rice, and coconnuts and many other articles of food within four days •••• Those people became very familiar with us. They told us many things, th::dr names and those of some of the islands that could be seen from that place. Their own island was called Zuluan and it is not ve~y large. We took great pleasure wit;,1 them, for they were very ploc:i.sant and conversable. In order to show then gren.ter honer, the captain-eeneral took them to ~is ship and showed them all his merchandise - cloves, cinnamon, p_epp'er, ginger, nutmeg, mace, gold, and all things . in the ship. He had some mortars fired for them, whereas they exhibited grent fear, and tried to jump out of the qhip. They rnado signs to us that the abovesaid articles grew'in that place where we were going. When thoy were about to :cetiro they took· their leave very_ grace.fully and ne:3.tly, s.1.yini; that they would return accor.::ling- to their promise. The islan,d where we werJ .1.s ca:::..J ed I-Iuri,unu; but inasmuch as we: four1d- two cp1: i:riL)"' there of the clearest water, we call2d it Ac(~ada da li buoni Segnialli (i.e. the Watering nlace of good Sig~~) foi there were the fi;si signs of 0 -17 ... gold which wo found in those districts. We found a great quantity of white coral there, and large trees with fruits a trifle smaller than the almond. and resembling pine seeds. There 3.re <1lso many palms, some of them good and others bad. There are many islands in that district, and therefore we call©d them the the archipelago of San Lazaros, as they were discovered on the Sabbath of St. Lazarus. They lie in X degrees of latitude toward the Arctic pole, 3.nd in a longitude of one hundred and sixty one degrees from the line of demarcation. At noon on Friday, March 22, those men came as they had promised us i~ two boatc with cocoanuts, sweet oranges, a jar of palm-wine, and a cock, in order to show us thut there were fowls in that district. They exhibited great signs of pleasure at seeing us, We purchased all those articles from them. · Their seignior was an old man who was paintod {i,E~., tattooed). He wore two r,old earrings (.§..£1:li~) in his ears, and the others many gold arml(:;ts on their arms and kerchiefs about their heads. We stayed there one week, and ,during that time our captain went ashore daily to visit the sick, and every morning gave them cocoanut water from his own hand, which comforted them greatly. There nre people living near that island who have holes in their ears so large that they can pass their arms throw:;h them. Those peoples 2re CC'.phri, that is to say heathen. They go nak~d with a cloth woven from the bark of a tree about their uriviss excent some of the chiefs who wear cotton cloth embroidored with silk at the ends by means of a needle. They anoint themselves with cocoanrrt and with leensced oil, as a protection against sun and wind. They have ·1ery black hair that falls to the waist, and use dnggers, knj_ves, and spears ormunented with gold, large shields, fascines, javelins, and fishing nets that resemble rizali, and their ooats are li~e ours. . •• On the afternoon of holy Monday, the day of our Lady, lV:[arch twenty-five, while wo were on the point of weighing anchor, I '\. ent to the 1 -18side of the ship to fish, and putting my feet upo11 a yard le,e.ding down into the storeroom, they slipped, for it was rainy, ,:md consequently I felJ. into t ho sea, so thut no one Grrw mo. When I wns all but under, my left hnnd hDppenod to catch hold of the clew-gnrnet of the mainsaii, which wa~ dansling (&scos~) in the water. I held on tightly, ::ind o,3g.:::rn to cry out so lustily that I was rsscued by tha small boat. I was aided, not, I 'believo, indeed throurh my merits, but through the mercy of that font of ch&rity (i,e., of the Virgin). That saffie day we shaped our course toward the west southwest between four small islc;nds, namely, Cone.lo, Hiunanghan, Ibusson, and Abarien, At Lirnasawa On Thursday morning, Mar~h tvrnnty-c-dght, as we had seen a firf? on 2n isJ.and the night before, we anchored ne.sr it .5 We saw a small boat which the natives call oo::.oto with ciin:ht men in it, ap:µroacning the fl::1gshi:'.). A slave belonging to the captain-general, -,'lho was a native of ZamatrL~ (i.o., Sumatra); w:i:i.ch -was formerly called Traprobana spoke them. Tnsy immediately understood him, ca~e alon~side the ship, unwilling to ente:c but takin:~ 2 po;J:i.tion at some little distance. The c2ptr:.iin see~.ng that thoy would not trust us, threw theD out ,'-l red cap and other thine:s tied to a bit of' wu0d. They received them very gladly, and went away quickly to advise their king. Aoout two hours latbr we saw two balang~ni ;o~i~~. Thev are large boats 2nd a::~e so~ cD.llod J~by -::.hcse· :ooople7. They -were full of mon, and thej_r kine; wus in the larger of them, being seated un-ier a;1 awning of rn2.ts, When the king cnme ne,:;r th,..; flagship, the slnve spoke to him. Thr_: 1,:-ine; tmderstood him, for in those di2tricts -<:,he lcLncs know more languages thnn the oth-3r PCOP~.e. He ordered some of his men to enter the ship~, but he al- 5 - Tho island referred to h,3re was Limasawa, a smetll island lying a short distence sout:-1 of LGyte. -19ways remained in his balane.;hai, at some little distance from the ship until his own men returned; and as soon as they returned he departed. The captain-general showed great honor to the man who entered the ship, and gave them some presents, for which the king wished before his departure to give the captain a large bar of gold and basl~etful of ginger. The J.atter, however, thanked the king heartily but would not accept it. In the afternoon we went in the ships Land anchored? near the dwellings of the king. Nex~ day, holy Friday, the captain-general sent his clave, who acted as our interpreter, ashore. in a smaJ.l boat to ask tho king j_f ho had any food to have it carried to the ships; and to say that they would be well satisfied with us, for he /and. his rnen? had come to the island as friends and-not as enemies. The king came with six or eight men in the same bo3.t and enterod the ship. He embraced the cc1ptain-general to whom he gave three porcelain j2rs covered with leaves and full of raw rice, two very large pradc, and other things. The captain-general gave the king a gnrmont of red and yeJ.J.ow cloth rnn cie in the Turkish fashion, and a fine red cap; and to the others (the king's men), to some knives ~nd to others mirrors. Then the captain··:?:eneral huc1 a collation spread for them, and had the king told through the slave that he dosired to -oe c.1si £§..Pi 1fhe with him, that is to say, brother. king replied that he also wished to enter the same relations with the captain-general. The capt1in showed him cloth of various colors, linen, coral Lornaments7, and many other ert:LcJ.es o.f.' merd1andise, and all the artillery, some of which he had discharged for him, wherea'e, the riati vec were greatly frightened. Then the captain-gene:ral had a man armsd as a soldier, and placed him in the raidst of three men armed with swortis and daggers, who struclc him on all parts of the body. Thereby was the kinz rende:;."'ed alr!1ost ,speechless. The captain-general told him t~rough the slave that one of those armed men was worth one hundred of his own men. The king answered that that was a fact. The captain-general said that he had two hundred mGn in each ship who were armed in that manner. He showed the king cuirasses, swords, and bucklers, and had a review made for him. Then he led the kinr._: to the deck of the ship, that is located above at the stern; and had his sea-chart and compass brought. He told the kinr.; through the interpreter how hG had found the strait in order to voyage thither, and how many moons he had been without seeing land, whereat the king was astonished, Lastly, he told the king that he would like, if it were pleasing to him, to send two of his men with him so that he might show them sorJ1e of his things. The king replied that he was agreeable, and I went in coL:pany with one of the other men. When I reached shore, the king raised his hands toward the sky and then turned toward us two. We did the same toward him as did all the oth8rs, The king took me by the hand; one of his chiefs took my companion: and thus they led us under a bamboo covering, where there was a balanghai, as long as eighty of my palm lengths, and resembling a fusta. We sat ci.own upon the stern of that bo.langhai, constantly conversing with signs. The king's men stood about us in a circle with swords, daggers, spears, and bucklers. The king had a plate of porl~ brought in and a large jar filled with wine. At every mouthful, we drank a cup of wine. The wine that was left Lin the cup? at any time, althouo;h that happened but rarely, was put into a j nr by itself, The king's jar was always kept co7ered and no one else drank from it but hc3 and I. Before the king took the cup to drink, h(i raised his clasped hands toward the sky, and then tow~rd me; and when he was about to drink, he extended the fist of his left hand toward mB (at first I thought that he was about to st:;."'ike me) and then drank, I did the same toward the king. They all make those signs one toward o.not.i.1'Jr then they drink. We ate vJith such ceremonies ,.tnd with other signs of friendship. I ate meat on holy Friday, for I could not help myself. Before the supper hour I gave the king many things which I had brought. I wrote down the names of many things in their language. When the king and the others saw me writing, and when I told them their / -21- words, they were all astonished. While engaged in that the supper hour was announced. Two large porcelain dishes were brought in, one full of rice and the other of pork with its gravy. We ate with the same si:?:ns and ceremonies, after which we went to the palace of the king which was built like a hayloft and. was thatched with fig LI. e., banang_7 and palm leaves. It was built up high from the ground on huge posts of wood and it was necessary to ascend to it by mean.s of ladders, The king made us sit down there on a bamboo mat with our feet drawn up like tailors. After a half-hour a platter of roast fish cut in pieces was brouglffi in, and ginger· freshly gathered, and wine. 'J'he king's eldest son, who vias the prince, came over to us, whereupon the king told him to sit down near us, and he accordingly did so. Then two platters were brought in (one with fish and its sauce, and the other with rice}, so that we might eat with the prince. My companion became intoxicated as a consequence of so much drinking and eating. They used the ~m of a tree called anjE!Q wrapped in palm or fig £i.e., banarJ.J l~aves for lights. The king made us a sign that he was going to go to sleep. He left the prince with us, and we slept with the latter on a bamboo mat with pillows made of leaves, When day dawned the king car~ and took me by the hand, and in that manner we went to where WG had had supper, in order to partake of refreshments, but the boat came to get us. Before we left, the king kissed our hands with great joy, and we his. One of his brothers, the king of another island, and three men came with us. The captain-general kept him to dine with us, and gave him many things. Pieces of cold, of the size of walnuts and eggs are found by sifting the earth in the island of that king who came to our ships. All the dishes of that king are of gold and also some portion of his house, as we were to].d by that king himself. According to their customs he wao very grandly decked out ,[niolto in ordin2,7, and the .finest looking man that we saw among those people. His hair was exceedingly black, and hung to his shoulders. He had a covering of silk on his head, and wore two large golden earrings fastened in h:i.s e.al"s, He wore a cotton cloth all embroidered with silk, which covered him from the waist to the knees. At his side hung a da~ger, the haft of which was somewhat long and all of gold• and its scabbard of carvGd wood, He had three spots of 80ld on every tooth, and his his teeth appear3d as if bound with gold. He wo.s perf'urmed wi.t,h storax and benzoin. H8 was tawny and paintnd tELttoeiJl all over. That island of 11:.Lt: w:u~1 call cd Butuan and. Calagal).. When those kinss wished to see one another, they both went to hunt in tl~wt islanl v1here we were• 0 ·~ i ,::, 'l'he nar.··e or h'-'· '"' i r· ti'.J ·~i- k1· CoJ· ""mbu J and . r1,,. ·.::: ·i ll.-..A.u~~ the second Raia Siaui. Li,e., .J. ,1. -L. V V --l .• ..,. c:, --0 -C.4, Easter Sunday Mass e..t Limasawa Early bn the morning of Sunday, the last of March, and Easter day, the captain-general sent the priest with ao@e men to prepare the place where mass was to be said; togethc:r with the interpreter to tell the king that wo W8I'e not going to land in order to dine with him, but to say mass, Therefore the king sent us two sw:.ne that h2 Lad h&d killed. When the hour for li~Ss arrived, ~G l~nded with about fifty men, wi:-hcuL body arr;1or~ but carrying our other arms; and c!'f')Ss,ed in our 'best clothes. BeforB we reached +:.he shore with our boats, six pieces were disch2r1~i as a sign of peace. We landed; tl1e two ld,1(:;'o 9rnbracecJ the captain-general, 2nd p~_aced liir,, ~'Je+;weqn tr.em, We went in mnrching order to t11e !)2_aco consecrated, which was not far from tl;l.13 3:so:.. e. I::efore the cor.nnencoment of mas~, tne c -,,}:;f:,c in-s ereral sprin:VJ.ed the en-~ire boG'J.(:)S of :,he; two r:in~s with musk water. The mass was off ere1 up. The k::i.ngs went forward to kiss the cross ai we did, but they did not off er the sacrifice. \i!h,~1. t :1e body of our Lord was elev~ted, they reIT~i!ed on their knees and worshiped Him with cl~s;ed hands. ThG ships fired all their artill0ry a~ on~G, when the body of Christ was €levated, the sj_gno.l having been given from the shore witL .r:-'.uslc:e-':-s. After the conclusion of the mass son;e o: our men took communion, The captain-f:':,ancr'al arranged a fencing tournament, at which ·;~Le :~J.ngs were great-ly pleased. 'I'hGn he hE:cl a cross ce.rried in nnd the nails and a crovm, to which irmnediate reverence was made. He tolC::. the kinss through thu interpreter that they we1 e the standai·ds given to him by 1 -23the emoeror his sovereign, so that wherever he might go he might set up those his tokens. (He said) that he wished to set it up in that place for their benefit, fo~ whenever any of our ships came, they would know that we had been there by that cross, and would do nothing to displease them or harm their property (property~ doublet in original rtlS.) If any of their men were captured, they would be set free immediately on that sign being shown. It was necessary to.set that cross on the summit of the highest mountain, so that on seeing it every morning, they might adore it; and if they did that, neither thunder,. li~htning, nor storms would harm them in the least. They thanked him heartily and (said) that they would do everything willingly. '11 he Captain-general also had them asked whether they were Moros or heathens, or what was their belief. They r2plied that they worshiped nothing, but that they raised their clasped hands and their face to the sky; and that they ~alled their god "Abba". Thereat the captain was very glad, and seeing that, the first king raised his hands to the sky and said that he wished that it were possible for him to make the captain see his love for him. 'I'he interpreter asked the king why there was so little to eat there. The latter replied that he did not live in that place except when he went hunting and to-see his brother, but that he lived in another island where all his family are. The Captain-general had him asked to declare whether he had any enemies, so that he might go with his ships to destroy them and to render them obedient to him. The king thanked him and said that he did indeed have two islands hostile to him, but that it was not the season to go there. The Captain told hirn that if God would again allow him to return to those districts, he would bring so many men that he would make the kingrs enemies subject to him by force~ He said that he was about to go to dinner, and that he would return after-ward. to have the cross set up on the sun1.mit of the mountain. They replied that they were satisfied, and then forming in battalion and firing the muskets, and the captain embracing the two kings, we took our leave. After dinner we all ·returned clad iE our doublets, and that afternoon went together with the two· ·24kings to the summit of the highest mountain there. Wheri we reached the summit, the Captain-general told them that he esteemed highly having sweated for them, for since the cross was therc 1 it could not but be of great us0 to them. On asldng them which port was the best to get food, they replied that there were three, Ceylon, Zubu, and Cnlaghann-, but that Zubu wa.s thG lcir:,;u~,t '..1nd the one with most trad·3 ~ They offered-- of thc~ir own accord to ·give us pilots to show us the wayl The Captaingeneral thanked them and determined. to go there,,_. for so did his ur..hap:py fate wi1l., Aft,er tho cross was erected in position, eGch.of us repeated a Pater Nost;~r anJ Ave Marin E.md adored the cross; and the kinzs-'afd the--s iinc-:--irhen we descend.ed through their c~ltivated fields, and went to the place where the balanghni was. The ki-ngs had some cocoanuts brought in so that Wi:~ might refresh ourselves. The Captain-~eneral asked the kings for the pilots for he intended to d0p2rt the following morning, and (said). that he. vwuld treat them as if they were the kings thems0lves, and would leave one of us as hostage. The l:ing replied that every hour he wished the pilots were at his command, but that night the first king changod his mind, and in the morning when we were about to depart, sent word to the Captain-general, asking him for love of him to wait _two days until he would, have his rice harvested, and other trifles attEmded to. He asked the Captain-general to send him some men and help hirri, so that it might bo sooner; and said that he intended to act as pilot himself. The Captain sent him some men, but t·h8 kings ate and drank- so much that they slept all the day. Somo said to excuse them that they were slightly sick. Our men did nothing on that day, but they worked the next two days. • •• Those people arc heathGns, nnd go naked and painted. They wear a piece of cloth woven from a tree about their privies •. They are very hoavy drinkers. Their ~omen aro clad in tree cloth from their waist down, and tbeir hair is black and reaches to the ground, They have holes pierced in their ears which are f111ed with 2:old.-. Those peopl0 are constantly chewing a fruit whic!1 they call "arsca" and which resembles a pear. They cut the fruit into four parts, end then wrap it in the -251 eaves of their tree which they call 71 betroi 1 (i. c., betel}. Those leaves resemble the leav8s of th8 mulberry. 'I'hey mix it with a little lime, .and ·when they have chewed it thoroughly, they spit it out. It makes the mouth exceedingly red. All tho people in those parts of the world use it, for it is very cooling to the heart, and if they ceased to use it they would die. There ar(3 dogs, cats swine, fowls, goats, rice, ginger, cocoanuts, figs ttananas), oranges, lemons, millet, panicum, sorgo, wax? and a quantity of gold in that island. It lies in a latitude of nine and two thirds degrees toward the Arctic pole, and in a longitude of-ono hundred sixty-two degrees from the line of demarcation. It is twonty five from the Acquada, called M:1.zaua.6 We remained there seven days, after which we la id our course tovrnrd the northwest, passing among five islands, Ceylon, Bohol, Canighan, Baybai and Gati1shan •••• Arrival at Cebu At noon on April seven, we entered the port of Zubu passing many villages, where 1ve saw many houses built upon logs. On approaching the city, the captain-general ordered the ships to fling their banners. The sails were lowered and arranged as if for battle and all the artillery was fired, and action which caused ereat fear to those people. The captain-general sent a foster-son of his as ambassador to the king of Zubo and an interpreter. When they reached the city, they found a vast crowd of people together with the Kine, all of whom had been frightened by the mortars. Th(.3 interpreter told them that that was our custom when entering into such places, as a si.gn of peace and friendship, and that we had d.ischnrf,'.ed all our mortars to honor the kin2: of the vi11 n:'2:c. The king and all of his men ;ere reassured; and the king had us as!<.:od by his govE',rnor whaJc we ,:vant ed. The interpreter rQplied th'.:3.t his riast8::- was a captain of the grGatest king and prince of the world o.nd that he was going to discover Malucho, but that he had comG solely to visit the king because of the good repo1~t which he had h(')ard from the king 6 - It is now called Limasawa. -26- , I / of Masau3, and to buy food with his morchandise,, The king told him that he was welcome(literaly: he had coma at a good time); but that it was their custom for all ships that entered their port to pay tribute and that it was but four days since a junk from Ciama (i.e. Siam) laden with gold and slaves had paid him tiibut e. As proof of his statement the king pointed out to the interpreter, a merchant from Ciam3 w:10 hctd rerna.ined to trade the gold and slaves. The interpreter told the king that, since his master was the captain of so [;reat a . king, he did. not pay tribute to any signior in the world, and that if the king wished peace, he would have peace, but if war instead, war.· Thereupon, . . i ' • ,., • , • t tl1e .Moro mere h ant sai. d to t.,(ie King li,1.ta nun. C':11.....E., that is to say i7Look well, sire". These rne1'l are the same who h3VC': conquered Calicut, Malaca, and all· India Magiore (i.e., India Mn.jor) .•. If they are treated well, tht;y e:ive·good treatn;ent, but if they are treated evil, evil and worse-treatment as they have done to Calicut and }falaca. The interpreter understood it all and told the king that his master's king vrns more powerful in men ancl ships than the king of Portogalo, that he was king of Spagnia and emperor of all the Christians, and that if the king did not care to be his friend he would next time send us many man that would destroy him. The Moro related everything to the king who said thereupon that he would deliberate,with his men, and would answer the captain on the following day. Then he had refreshments of many dishes, all li,.qde from meat and contained in porcelain potters, besides many j8rs of wine brought in. After our men had refreshed themselves, they returned and told: us everything. The kinz of .lYbzaua who w:1s th() r.1ost influential after that king and the Si.r.:nior of 3. number of islands went ashore-~ to speak to _,the king of the great courtesy of our captain-general. ••• On Sunday morning, April fourteen, forty men of us went ashore, two of whom wore coupletely armed and pr--cceded th<"J roy:1.l bannero When we reached l1nd all the artillery was firod. -27Mass Baptism in Cebu After dinner the priest and some of th~ others went ashore to baptize the queen, who came with forty women. We conducted her to the platform and she was made to sit down upon a cushion, and the other women near her, until the priest should be ready. She was shown an image of our Lady, a very beautiful wooden Child Jesus, and a cross. Thereupon she was overcome with contrition and asked tor baptism amid her tears. We named her Johanna after the emperor's mother; her daughter, the wife of the prince, Catherina, the queen of Ma.zaua, Lisabeta, and the others each their (distinctive) name. Counting men, women and children, were baptized eight hundred souls. The queen was young and beautiful, and was entirely covered with a white and black cloth, Her mouth and nails were very red, while on her heud she wore a large hat of palm ..Leaves in the manner of a parasol, with a crown. about it of the same leaves, like the tiara of the pope; and she novor soes any place without an attendant. She asked us to give her the little Child Jesus to keep in place of her idols; and then she went aw3y. In the afternoon the king and queen, accompanied by numerous persons came to the shore. Thereupon, the captain had many trombs of fire and largo rnort:::irs discharged, by which they were most highly delighted. The captain and the king called one another brothers. That king's name was Raia Humabon. Before that week had-gone, all the persons of that island, and some from the other islands were baptizod. We burned one haw.lot tihich was locat8d in a neighboring village because it refusetl to obey the king or us. We set up the cross there for those people were heathens,. Had they been Moros, W8 could havq erected a column there as a token of greater hard~ ness, fo-r the Moros are much harder to convert than the heathen. , •• There are many villages in that island. Their names and those of their chiofs are as follows: Cinghapala, and its chiefs, Cilatan, Ciguibucan 1 Cimaningha, Cimatichat, and Cidantabul; one, mandaui, and its chief, Apanoaan; one Lalan, and its chief, Theteu; one, Lalutan, and its chief, Tapan; -28one Cilumai; and one, Lubucun. All those villages render0d obedience to us, and gave us food and tribute. Near that island of Zubu was an island called :Matam, which formed the part whore we were anchored. The name of its village was Matan and its chiefs were Zula and Cilapulapu. 'fhat city which was burned was in that island and was called Balaia. • •• The Mactan Affair • On Friday, April twenty~six, Zula, a chief of the island of Matan, sent one of his sons to present two goats to the captain-general, and to say he would send him all that he had promised, but that he had not been able to send it to him because o.f the other chief Cilalulapu_, who refused to obey the ki"ng of Spagnia. He requested the captain to send him only one boatload of men on the next night, so that they might help him and fight against tha other chief. The captain-general decided to go thither with three boatloads. We begged hirn repeatedly not to go' but he, like a good shepherd, refused to abandon his flock. At midnight, sixty men set out e.rmGd with corselots and helmets, together with the Christian King, the prince, some of the chief men, and twenty or thirty balanguais. We reached l'ffatan three hours before dawn. The cantain did not wish to fight then, but sent a mes'.sage to tne natives by the Moro to the effect that if they ·:JOl:.ld obey the king of Spagnia, recognize the Christian King as their sovereign, and pay us our tribute, he would be their friend; but if they ~iohod otherwise, they should see our lanbes wound. They replied that if v1e had lances they h.J.d lances of bamboo and stakes hardened with f~.re. ( They asked us) not to proceed to attack them at once, but to wait until morning, so that tnoy might have ~ore men. They said that in order to induce us to go in search of them) for they had dug certain pitholes between the houses in order that we might .f al1 into them. When morning came forty-nine of us leaped into the water up to our thighs, and walked through water for more than two c:cossbow flir(hts before we could reach -29the shore. The boats could not approach nearer because of cert2in rocks in the water. The other eleven men remained behind to guard the boats. When we reached the land, three men had formed in three divisions to the number of more than on(! thousand five hundred persons. When they heard of us, they charged down upon us with exceeding loud cries, two divisions on our flanks and the other on our front. When the c-aptain saw that, he formed us into two divisions, and thus did we begin to fight. The musketeers and crossbowmen shot from a distance for about a half-houl'', but uselessly; for the shots only passed through the shields which 'lvere made of thin wood and the arms (of the bearers). The captain cried to thorn, "Cease firing1 cease firingl II but his order was not at all heeded. ·when the natives saw tht1.t we were shooting our muskets to no purpose, crying out they determined to stand firm but they redoubled their shouts. When our muskets were discharged, the natives would never stand still, they leaped hither and thither, covering themselves with their shields. They shot so many arrows at us and hurled so many bamboo spears ( ;:'JOfi;_e of them tipped with iron) at the captain-general, besides pointed stakes hardened with fire, stones, and mud, that we could scarcely defend ourselves. Seeing that, the captain-general sent ~,ome 1::ien to burn thoir houses in order to terrify them. When they saw their houses burning, they were roused to greater fury. Two of our men wore killed near the houses, while we burned twenty or thirty houses. So many of them charged down upon us that they shot the captain through the right leg with a poisoned atrow. On that account, he ordered us to retire slowly, but the men took to fli[.ht, except six or eight of us who remained with the captain. 'rhe natives shot only at our 1 egs, for the latter were bcJre; and so many were the spea~s and stones that they hurled at us, that 1,ve could offer no resistance. The mortars in the boats could not aid us as they were too far avJay. So, we continued to retire for more than a good crossbow flight from the shore always fightin8 up to our knees in the water. The natives continued to pursue us, nnd picking up the same spear four or six times, hurled it at -30us a~Din and a~ain. Recognizing the captai~, so many turnod upon him that they knocked his helmet off his head t,-iice, but he always stood firmly like a good knight, to~ether with some others. Thus did we fight .for more than one hour, refusing to retire farther. An Indian hurled a bamboo spear into the captain's face, but the latter immediately killed him with his lance, which he left in the ·Indian's body. Then, trying to lay hand on sword, he could. draw it out but halfway, because he had been wound0d in the nrm by a bamboo spear. When the natives saw that, they all hurled themselves upon him. One of them wounded him on the left leg with a large cutlass, which resernbl es a scimitar, only being larger. That caused the captain to fall face downward, when immediately they :r.usr~ed upon him with iron and bamboo spears and with their cutlasses, until they killed our mirror, our light, our comfort, and our true guide. When they wounded him, he turned back many times to see whether we were all in the 'Joats, Thereupon, bE,holding him dead, we, wounded, retreated, as best we could, to tho boats, which were already pulling off. · The Christian Kin:?; 1rnuJ.d huve aided us, but the captain charged him before wo landed, not to leave his balanghai, but to stay to se8 how we fought. When the ~ir~ learned that the captain was dead, ho wept. Had it not been for th&t unfortunate captain, not a single one of us would have been saved in the boats, for while he was fizhtin~ the others retired to the boats. I hope thr6ugh 1the efforts) your most illustrious Lordship, that the fame of so noble a captain will not become effaced in our times. Among the virtues which he possessed, he was more constant than ever any ono else in the greatest of adversity. He endured hunger better than all the others, and more nccur:=i.tely than any man in the wo:tld did he understand sea charts 2,nd navigation, And that this was the truth was seen openly, for no other had had so much natural talent nor the boldness to learn how to circumnavigate the world, as h0 had almost done. Tllat battle was fought on Saturday, April twenty-seven, 1521. The captain desired to fight S:1turday, especially holy to him. Eight of our men were killed with him in that battle, and four Indians, who ha.d b eGome Christians and who come afterwnrd to aid us ware killed by the mortars -31of the boats. , Of the enemy, only fifteen were killed, while many of us were wounded, In the afternoon, the Christian king sent a message with our consent to the people of :Matan, to the effect that if they would give us the captain and the other r.ien who had been killed, we would give them as much merchandise as they wished. They answered that they would not give such a man, as we imagined- ( they should do) and that they would not give him for all the riches in the world, but, they intended to keep him as a memorial. On Saturday, the day on which the captain was killed, the four men who had remained in the city to trade, had our merchandise carried to the ships • ••• The Return Voyage t6 Spain On Tuesday night as it dre1,I/ near Wednesday, February eleven, 1522, we left the island of Timar and took to the great open sea called Laut Chidol. Laying· our course toward the west southwest, we 1 eft the island of Zamatra, formerly called Traprobana, to the north on our right hand, for fear o.f the king of Portoghala; ••• In order that we might double the cape of Bonna Speranza (i,e., "Good Hope"), we descended to forty-two degrees on the side of the Antarctic Pole. We were nine weeks near t\1at cape with our sails hauled down because we had the west and northwest 1,d.nds on our bow quarter and because of a most furious storm. That cape lies in a latitude of thirty-four and one•half degrees, and is one thousand six hundred leguas from the cape of Nalaca. It is tho largest and most dangerous cape in the world. Some of our men, both sick and well, wished to go to a Portuguese settlement called Mozambich, bGcause the ship was leakJ.ng badly, because of the severe cold, and especially because we had no other food than rice and water; for as we had no salt, our provisions of meat had putrefied. Some of the others however, n~re desirous of their honor than of their own lif8, determined tb go to Spagnia living or dead. Finally by God 1 s help, we doubled that capo on May six at a distence of five -32 ... leguas. Had ,,. e not approached so closely, we could never have doubled it. Then we sailed nortrr-west for two months continually without taking on any fresh food or water (r.gfrj.gerio). Twenty-one men died during that short time. When we cast them into the sea, the Christians went to the bottom face upward, while the Indians always went down face downward. Had not God given us good weather we would all have perished of hunger. Finally, constrained by our great extremity, we went to the islands of Capo Verde. Wednesday, July nine, we reached one of those islands called Sancto Jacobo, and immediately sent the boat ashore for food, with the story for the Portuguese that wo had lost our f,oremast under the equinoctial line (although we had, lost it upon the cage of Bonna Speranza), and when we were rcstepping it, our capit,~in-gencral had gone to Spagnia with the other two ships; With those good words and with our merchandise, we got two boatloads of rice. We charged our men when they went ashore in the boat to ask what day it was, and they told us that it was Thursday v1ith the Portuguese. We were greatly surprised for it was Wednesday with us, and we could not see how we had made a mistake; for as I had always kept well, I haa set down every day withou4 .any interruption •. However, as was told us lator, it was no error, but as the voyage had been made continually to,1ard the west and we hrtd returned to the same place as does the sun, we had made that gain of twenty-four hours, as is clearly seem. The boat having returned to the shore again for rice, thirteen men and the boat wen detai~ed1 boc~use one of them!, as we learnen after• ward in ~pagnia, told the Portuguese that our captain was dead, as w~ll as others, and that we were not going to Spagnia. Fearing lest W8 also be taken prisoners by certdin ca:pavols, we hastily de· parted. On Saturday, Septemb,0r six, 1522, we en- . tered tho bay of San Lucar wi"i:;h only eighteen men \ and the majority of them sickt all that were left ' of the sixty rnen who left Malucho. Some died of hunger; some dessert ed at the island of Timor; and some wore put to death for crimes. From the time we loft that bay (of San Lucar) until the present day (of our return), we had sailed fourteen th-ousani four hundred and sixty legua.s, and furthermore had completed the circumnavi.l!ation of the world from east to west. On Monday; September oight, we cast . -33anchor near the quay of Seviglia, and discharged all our artillery. Tuesday, we all went in shirts and barefoot, each holding a candle, to visit the shrine of Santa Maria de la Victoria (i.e., trSt. Mary of Victory"), and that of Santa Maria de 1 1 Anti qua (i.e. 2 t1St. Mary of Antiquity"). Leaving Seviglia, I went to Vagliadolit (_i.e., Valladolid), where I presented to his sacre_d I,lajesty, Don Carlo, neither gold nor silver, but things very highly esteemed by such a sovereign. Among other things I gave him a book, written by my hand, concerning all the niatters that had occurred frorn day to day during our voyage. I left there as best I could and went to Portngalo where I spoke with King Johanni of wh9.t I had,_ s ee:1 ~ Passing through Spagnia, I went to Fransa where I made a gift of ce1"tain things from the other hemisphere to the mother of the most Christian king, J2on Francisco, Madame_ the regent. Then I c.'lme to .Ltalia, where I established my permanent abode, and devoted my poor lab ors to ·the famous and r;iost illustrious Lord, Fhilipo de Villers Lisleadam, the most worthy grand master of RhodL, The Cavalier ANTONIO PAGAPHETTA. (2) Transylvanus own story of the Magellan e::pedition is told in part, in the following excerpts: 1 Background of the Exp edit ion Not long ago one of tr10s e five ships returned which the emperor, while 118 was at Saragossa some years aDo, had sent into a strm1ge and 1 - B. & R., Vol. 1, P• 305, ff. -34hitherto unknown part of the world, to search for the islands in v1hich spices grow. For al though the Portuguese brine; us a great quantity of them from the Golden Chersonesus, which we now call .Malacca, nevertheless their own Indian possessions _produce none but pepper. For it is well known that th8 other spices, as cinnamon, cloves, and the nutme.g, 1:Jhich we call mus cat, and its covering (mace J which we call muscat-flower, are brought to their Indian possessions from distant islands hitherto only known by name' in ships held together not by iron fastenings, but merely by palmleaves and having round 5ails also woven out of palm-fibers. Ships of this sort they call "junks" and they are impelled by the vdnd only when it blows directly fore or aft. Nor is it wonderful that th~se islands have not been known to any mortal, almost up to our time. For \-1hatever statements of ancient authors we have hitherto read with respect to the native soil of thase spices, are partly entirely fabulous, and partly so far from truth, that the very regions, in v.Jh5_ch th(;y asserted that these spices were produced, are scarcely less distant froB the countries in whic:1 it is now ascertained that they grow, than_we ourselves •••• Now it was necessa~y for our sailors, who have recently returned, to sail round the whole world and that in a veI'Y wide circuit, before they discoveretl these islands and returned to Europe; and, since this voyage was a very remark• able one, and neither in our own time, nor in any former age, had such a voyage been accor:1plished, or even attempted, I have determined. to send your Lordship a full and accurate account of the expedition. I have taken much care in o'ut&inin:c: an account of the facts from the co!llinandin :-·of .fie er of the squadron, 2 and from the individual sailors w!lo have returned with him. They also made a statem.3nt to the emperor, and to several other 2 - Sebastian del Cano. -35persons with such good faith and sincerity, that they appeared in their narrative, not m~rely to have abstained from fabulous statements, but also to contradict and refute the fabulous statements made by ancient authors. • •• Some thirty years ago, when the Castillians in the West and Portuguese in the East, had begun to search after new and unknown lands, in order to avoid any intorf€:rence of one with the other, the Kings of these countries divided the whole world between thc::m, by the authority probably of Pope Alexander VI, on this plan, that a line should be drawn from the North to the South pole through a point three hundred and sixty leagues West of the Hesperides which they now call Cape Verde ls lands, v·,ihich would divide the earth t s surface into two equal portions. All unknown lands hereaft~r discovered to the east of this line were assignsd to the Portuguese, all on the west to the Castillians. Hence it camG to pass that Castilians always sailed southwest, and there discovered a very extensive continent, besides numerous large islands, abounding in c:;old, pearls and other valuable commodities, and have quite recently discovered a large inland city named Tenoxtica (:Mexicol situated in a lake like Venice. Peter Martyr,--' an author who is more careful as to the·accuracy of his statements than of the elegance of his style, has given a full but truthful description of this city. But the Portu_;uese sailinz southward past the l-Iesperides (Cape Verde Island:::) and the Fish-eating Ethiopians (West Coast of Africa), crossed tLe Equator and the· Tropic of Capricorn, and sailing eastward discovered several very large islands heretofore unknown. Thence, by way of the Arabian and Persian Gl,llf s, they arrived at the shores of. India within the Ganges, where now there is the'very great trading station and the kingdom of Calicut. Hence they sail,3d. to Taprobane which is now called Zamatar? (Sumatra). Thence, they came to the Golden Ghersonesus, where now stands the well-peopled city' of Malacca, the principal place of business of the East. After t~is they pene- . 3 - Author of De orbe nono Decades, 1516. -36trated into a 5-;reat gulf, as far as the nation of the Sinae, who are now called Schinae (Chinese), where they found a fair-complexioned and tolerablycivilized people,/like our folks in Germany. And althou!.h there was a sommvhat doubtful rumour afloat, that the Portuguese had advanced so far to the weast, that they c0me to the end of their own limits, and had passed over into the territory appointed for the Castilians and that Jv'f..alacca and the Great Gulf were within our limits, all this was more sai.d than believed, until four years ago, Ferdinand Magellan, a distinguished Portuguese, who had for many years sailed about the Eastern Seas as admiral of the Portuguese fleet, having quarreled with his king, who he considered had acted ungratefully towards him, and Christopher Haro, brother of my father-in-law, of Lisbon, who had, through his agents for many y8ars carried on trade with those eastern coq.ntries, and more recently with the Chinese, so that he was well acquainted with these matters (he also, having been ill-used by the King of Portugal, had returned to his native country, Castille), pointed out to the emperor, that it was not yet clearly ascertained, whether Malacca was within the boundaries of the Portuguese or of the Castilians, because hitherto its longitude had not been definitely known, but that it was an undoubted ~act that the Greo.t Gulf and the Chinese nations were within the Castilian limits. They asserted also that it was absolutely certain, that the islands called the tbluccas, in which all sorts of spices grow, and f~om which they were brou,:;:1t to Malacca, were co:1t2inGd in the Western, or Castilian division, and. that it would be possi;)le to sail to them, a:1:1d to bring the spices at less trouble and expens,3 from their native soil to Castile. The plan of the voyage was to sail west, and then coasting the Southern Hemisphere round the south of Amorica to the East •••• The emperor and his council considered that 1?he plan proI?osed by Magellan and Ha::'.'o, though holding out considerable advantages, was ono of very considerable difficulty as to execution. After some delay, Magellan offered to go out himself, but Haro -37undertook to fit out a squadron at the expense of himself and his friends provided that they were allowed to sail under the authority and patronage of his Majesty. As each resolutely upheld his own scheme, the emperor himself fitted out a squadron of five ships and appointed Magellan to the command. It was ordered that they should sail southwards by the coast of Terra Firma, until they found either the end of that country or some strait, by which they might arrive at the spicebearing Moluccas. Departure of the Expedition - Discovery of the Strait of .Magellan Accordingly on the ten~h of August, 1519 1 Ferdinand Magellan ·Nith his five ships sailed from Seville. In a few days they arrived at the Fortunate Islands, no11,1 called Canaries. Thence they sailed to the islatids of Hesperides ( Cape Verde), and thence sailed in a southwesterly direction towards that continent which I have already mentioned (Terra F'irma or South America) and after a favora'ole voyage of a few days discovered a promontory, which they called St. Mary's. Thence they coasted along this continent, which extends far on southwards, and which I now think should be called·the Southern Polar land, then gradually slopes off in a westerly direction, and so sailed several degreos south of the Tropic of Capricornw Not till tho end of March in the follovling year, (1520), did they arrive at a bay, 1r-1hich they called St. Julian t s Bay • • • , They stated that the longitude was fifty-six degrees west of the Canaries. As soon as Magellan observed that the weather was less stormy and that the winter began to break up, he sailed 6ut of St. Julian 1 s Bay on the twenty-fourth of August 1520, as before. For some days he coasted along to the southward and at last sighted a cape, which they called Cape Santa Cruz. Here a storm from the east caught the;11, and one of the five ships was dri~en on shore and wrecked, but the crew and all goods on board were saved, except an African slave who was drowned. After -38this the coast se~med to stretch a little south eastwards, and as they c_ontinued to exp'iore it? on the twenty-sixth of November (1520) an opening was observed havin0 the ·appearance of a strait; :r,Iagellan at once sailed in with his whole fleet, and seeing several bays in various directions, directed three of the ships to cruise about to ascertain whether there was any way through, undertaking to wait for them five days at the entrance of the strait so that they might report -what success they had. One of these ships vrns cor;-Jnanded by Alvaro de Iviesquita, son of Magellan' s brother, and this by the "'.vindings of the channel came out again into the ocean whence it had set out. When the Spaniards saw that they were at a considerable distance from the other ships, they plotted among themselves to return home, and having put Alvaro their Captain in irons, they sailed northwards_, and at last they reached the coast of Africa, and there took in provisions, and eight months after leaving the other ships, they arrived in Spain, where they brour:;ht AJ.varo to trial on the charcr,e that it had· 8hiefly been through his advice and pet'suasion that his uncle :Magellan had adopted sue.,..½ severe measures,_ agains~, the Castilians. Mae:,~ellan waited soee day·s ovor the appointed time for. his ship, and meanwhile one ship had returned, and reported t:1at they had found nothing but a shallow bay, and the shores stony and with hif~h cli:::'f's; bnt the other re:)orted that the greutest bay had the appearance of :..1 strait, as they had sniled on for three days a:1d Lad found no way out, but that the farther ·~hey wont the narrower the passage became, and it was ~o dcop, that in many places th8y sounded without finding the bottom; they also noticed from the tiCe of the sea, that the flow was somew.hat st1°0Lz;e:c thaa the ebb, a11d thence they conjectured tho.t tJ1<:)re wrrs a passage that ·way into some other se.:.1. Un hoarilli! this Magellan determined to sRil al_oi:. 0: t~iis clwn':. nel. This strait, though not theJ.1 Lno'm1 to be such, was of the.breadth in some,places of three, in others of two, in others of fi~e or ten Italian miles and inclined slightly to the ,:rnst •••• -39Crossing the Pacific Magellan saw that the main land extended due _north, and therefore gave orders to turn away from the great continent, leaving it on the right had, and to saiJ. over that vast and e::tensive ocean, which have probably never been traversed by our ships or by those of any other nation, in a northwestcrly direction, so ':;hat they might arrive at lost at the Easter:--;. ocean, cor,1ing at it from the west, and again ent:,er the torrid zone, for he was satisfied that tt.e Mo1uccas -were in the extreme east, and could not be far off the equator. They continued in this course, never deviating from it., except when compelled to do so now and then by the force of the wind •••• After sailing for three months and twenty days with good fortune over this ocean, and having traversed a distance a:.most too long to estimate, having had a strong wind aft almost the whole of the time, and having again crossed the equator, they saw an island, which they afterwards learnt from the neighborinz people was called Inuagana .L1When they came nearer to it:,, they· found thu latitude , to be eleven degrees north; the longitLde they reckoned to be one hundred and fifty-eight degrees west of Cadiz. Arrival in the Philippines Our men then sailed towards Selani. 5 but a storm caught them so t;hat they could net, 1.and there, but they were driven to aTio~~9~ i31Qnd called ¥iassa.na,6 where t:11:i ki.i.1.[:-; cf ··::.:w t'1.:cee islands resides. From this island th~v sailed to Su1?uth (Zebu), a_very lar~e isi_2,i?d, :tl1C::. we:u supl"avina!.:;. ~ome t:o a TY,, L.;>'lr<J· u -,,-.J.-1 "'no-epll Ad . , ,. ' wh·~~e e.L ..:•_J. -4,· b ment ,,Jith the Chief they irnned.i,~_"::,e::il:r :_.::.nded to celebrat~ divine worship accordi~~ to ~~ristian usage - for the festival of:' the 1·csur:;_·ect::.on of Him-who has smted us vrns at hand. Aecordingly with some of the sails of the .shj_ps and branches of trees they erected a chapel, and in it cons,J. V .... -.I 4 - An island in the Marianas. 5 The Ceylon of Pigafetta. 6 - Limasawa. ···- -· '""i..., .... e,:.,.,_ -i. ... -40tructed an altar in the Christian fashion, and divine service was duly performed. The chief and a large crowd of Indians came up, and seemed much pleased with the religious rites. They brought the admiral and. ::wme of the officers into the chief's cabin, and set before them what food they had. The bread v·/as made of sago, which is obtained from the trunk of a tree not n111ch unlike the palm. This is chopped up small, and fried in oil, and used as bread, a specimen of which I sent to your Lordship; their drink was a liquor which flows from the branches of palm-trees when cut, some birds were also served up at this n-:eal; and also sorne of the fruit of the country. Magellan having noticed in the chief's house a sick person in a very wasted condition, asked who he was and from what disease he was suffering. He was told that it was the chief's grandson, and that he has been sufferin,~ for two years from a violent fever. Magellan exhorted him to be of good courage, that if he would devote himself to Christ, he would immediately rGcover his former health and strength.. Ths': Indian consented and adored the Cross and received baptism, and tho next day declared that he was v-1ell ap;ain, rose from his bed, and walked about and took his meals like the others. What visions he may have told his friends I can not sGy; '.)ut th,,:: chief and over twenty hundred Indians were baptized and professed the name and faith of Christ. Magellan seeing that this island was rich in gold and ginger, and that it was so conveniGntly situated v.Jith respect to the neighboring islands, thHt it would be easy, makinG this his headquarters, to explore their resources and natural productions, he therefore went to the chief of Subuth and sugrsst8d to him, that since he had turned away from the foolish and impious worship of false gods to the Christian religion, it would be proper that the chiefs of neighboring islands should obey his rule; that he had determined to send envoys for this purpose, and if any of the chiefs should refuse to obey this summons, to compel them to do so by force of arms. The proposal pleased the savage, and the envoys, were sent: the chiefs came in one by one c:1nd paid hon1c1se to the Chief of Subuth in the manner adopted in those countries. -41The M:'1.cto.n · Affa:i.r But the nearest island is called JWauthan {Matan), and its king was superior in military force to the other chiefs; and he declined to do homage to one whom he had been accustomed to command for so long. IViagellan, nnxious to carry out his plan, ordered forty of hj_f1 men, whom he could rely for valor and military i:;kill to arm themscl ves and pass e.d over to the island Mau than in boats, for it was very near. The chief of Subuth furnished him with some of his own people, to guide him as to the topography of the island and the character of the country, and, if it should be necessary to help him in the battle. · The king of iV'lauthan, seeing the arrival of our men, led into the field some three thousand of his people. l\ll'.agellan, drew up his own men, and what artillery he had, though his fol"ce 1:vas somewhat small, on the shore, and although he saw that his force was much inferior in numb ors, and that his opponents were a warlike race, and were equipped with lances and other weapons, nevertheless thought it more advisable to face the enemy 1vith them, than to retreat, or to avail himself of the aid of the Subuth islanders. Accordingly he exhorted his men to have courag~, and not to be alarmed at the superior force of the enemy; since it had often been the case, as had recently happened in the island (Peninsula) of Yucatan, that two hundred Spaniards had routed two or even three hundred thousand Indians. He said to the Subuth islanders, that he had not brought them with him to fight, but to see the valour and military prowess of his men. 'i.1 hen he attacked the I-'Iauthan islanders. and both sides fought boldly; but as the er.1emy surpassed our men in number, and used longor Vrn.ches, to the great damage of' our men, at last M::1gellan .himself wc1.s thrust through and slain. Althou6 h the survi \rors did not consider themselves fairly beaten yet, as they had lost their leader, they retreated; but as they retreated in good order, the enemy did not venture to- pursue them. The Spo.nia.rds then, having lost their admiral, I~gell~n, and seven of their comrades, returned to Subuth, where they chose as their new admiral John Serra.no, a man of no con- -42temptible ability.. He renewed the alliance with the chief of Subuth, by making him additional presents, and undertook to conquer the king of lV1a.uthan. :Massacre at Cebu Magellan had been the owner of a slave, a native of Mollucas, whom he had formerly bought in lvlalacca; and by means of this slave, who was able to speak Spanish fluently, and of o.n interp:ceter of Subuth, who could speak the Moluccan language, our men carried on their negotiations. This slave had taken part in the fight ~with the Iv[authan islanders~ and had been slightly wounded, for which reason he lay by all day intending to nurse himself. Serrano, who could do no business without his help, rated him ·soundly, 2.nd told him that though his master Magellan was dead, he was still a slave, and that he would find that such was the case, and v·muld get a good flogging into the bargain, if he did not exert himself and to do what was required of him more zealously. This speech much incensed the slave against our people: but he concealed his anger and in a few days went to the chief of Subuth, and told him that the avarice of the Snaniards was insatiable: that they had determined' as soon as they should have defeated the king of J!.Iauthan 1 to turn round upon him, and take him away as a prisoner; and that the only course for him (the Chief of Subuth) to adopt was to anticipate by treachery. The savage believed this, and secretly ca@e to und0,rstanding with the chief of Mauthan, and m.ade arrangements with hir.1 for common action against our people. Admiral Serr a no, 2nd t '\'lent y seven of the principal officers and men, were invited to a solemn banquet~ These, went unsuspectingly, for the natives had car2fully dissembled their intentions, went on the shore w'ith,:iut precautions, to take their dinner with the Chief. While they were at the ta'.)le, some armed men, who had been concealed close by, ran in and slew them. A great outcry was made: it was reported on our ships that our men were killed, and that, the whole island was hostile to us; our men saw ·rrom on board the shifs, that the handsome cross, which they had set up in a tree, was torn down by the natives and cut into fragments. When the Spaniards, -43who had remained on board, heard of thE-) slaughter of our men, they feared further treachery: so they weighed anchor and began to set sail without delay. Soon afteri;·Jards Serrano was broueht to the coast a prisoner; hG entreated the~ to deliver him from so miserable a captivity saying that be had got 1 eave to be rc1.nsorned, if his men would agree to it. Al though our men thought it was disgraceful to 1 eave their commander behind in this way, their fear of the treachery of islanders was so great that they put to sea, leaving Serrano on the shore in vain laii1enting and beseeching his comrades to rescue him. 'I'he Spaniards having lost their commander and several of their comrades, sailed on sa.d and anxious, not merely on the account of the loss they had suffered, but also because their number hnd been so diminished, that it was no longer possible to work the three remaining ships. The Return Voyage On this question they consulted together, and unanimously camG to this conclusion, that the best plan was to burn one of the ships, and to sail home in the two remaining. They therefore sailed to a neighboring island, called Cohol (Bohol), 2nd having put the rigging and stores of one of the ships on board the two, others, set it on fire. Hence they proceeded to the island of Gibeth.7 Although they found that this island was well supplied with gold and ginger and many other things, they did not think it desirable to stay there any length of time as they could not establish friendly relations with· the natives and the';,r were too few in numoor to venture to use force. ·From Gibeth they proceeded to the island of Porne (Borneo). In this archipelago there are two large islands; one of which is called Siloli {Gilolo), whose king had six hundred children. Siloli is larger than Porne, for Siloli can 7 - Quipit, a port on the northwest part of J.1.,Iindanao. -44hardly be circu1;mavigated in six months, but Porne in three months. Al though Siloli is larger than Porne, yet th8 latter is more fertile, and dist5 ~guished as containing a large city of the same name as the island. , •• On leaving this island our men having paid th0;ir respects to the king, and propitiated him by prcs0nts, sailed to the Moluccas, their way to ,;;Jhich l1D.d been pointed out to them by the king, Then they came to the coast of the island of Solo, where they heard that pearls were to be found as large as dove's eg~s, or even hen 1 s eggs, but that they were only to be had in very deep water. Our men did not bring home any single large pearl, as they were not there at the season of the year for pearl-fishing, They said however that they found an oyste~ there the flesh of which weighed forty-seven pourtds. ••• Son after our men had sailed from · Thedori, the larger of t:w two ships ( the Trinidad)· sprang a leak, whic >.!. 1et in so much water, that they were obliged to return to Thedori. The Spaniards seeing that this defect could not be put right except with much labor and loss of ti,me, asreed that the other ship (the Victoria) should sail to the Cape of Catti.c~ara, thence across the ocean as far as possible froLl the Indian coast, lest they should be sea:n by the Portuguese, until they came in sic;ht of the southern point of Africa, b .:::yond tl:::.e troT:)ic of Capricorn, t·Jhich the Portuguese cell the Cape of Good Hope, for thence the voyaze to S?ain was easy. It is also arranged that, when the ~epairs. of the other ship were completed, it should s3.iJ. back through the Archipelago and the Vast {Pacific) Ocean to the coast of the continent, 11Lic:1 we have already :mentioned (South America) unt:U. they came to the Isthmus of Darien, where only a narrow neck of lnnd divides the South Sea from the Western Sea, in which are the islands belon:fng to Spain. The s~aller ship accordingly set sail again from The.-:bri, and though they went as far as twelve degrees so nth, they did not find Cattigara, which Ptolemy considered to lie considerably south of' the equator; however after a long voyage, they arrived in sight of the Cape of Good Hope, and thence sailed to the Cape Verde Islands. Here this ship also, after having been so long at sea., began to be leaky, and the men, -v.iho had lost several of' their compe.nions through hardship in the course of their adventure, were un- -45able to keep the vmter pumped out. They therefore. landed at one of the islands called So.ntiar;o, to buy slaves. As our men, sailor-like, had no money, they offered cloves in exchange for sl~ves. When the Portuguese officials heard of this, they committed thirteen of our men to prison. The rest eighteen in number, being alc1rmed at the position in which they found themselves, left their companions behind, and sailed direct to Spain. Sixteen months after they had sailed from Thedori,·on tha sixth of Septem1J<Jr 1522, they nrrived S8fe and sound at a port (San Lucas) near Seville. These sailors were certainly more worthy of perpetual fame, than the Argonauts who sailed with Jason to Colchis, and the stip itself deserves to be placed among the constelJ.a tior.s more tha.n the ship Argo. For the Argo only sailed from Greece through the Black Sea, but our ships setting out from Seville sailed first southwards, then through the whole of the W~st, into the Eastern Seas, then back again into the Western. · -46- CHAPTER THREE LA'rER ATTEMPTS AT QOLONIZATION, 1525-1565 1. Tho Loaisa Expedition The return of the Victoria in September, 1522, with survisors of the Magellan expedition ar'JUS ed in Spain great King Charles I himself was much enthusiasm and interest. impressed by what had been accomplished. Shortly after the return of the Victoria he gave orders for the launch:. ing of a new expedition to the East "to reap the fruits of · It was his aim to extend to the Magellan 1 s discoverieEi. 11 East the Spanish colonial empire. Preparations for the ne1,1 exp(idition were completed in the summer of 1525. A much larger expeditionary force than the one led by lViagellan was ass.embled. seven vessels and 450 men. It included In command of the -expedition was Fray Garcia Jofre de Loaisa, a distinguished Spaniard, a man well versed and experienced in thE1 art of navigation. Accorapanying him as ranking officer was Sebastian del Cano, who had made a name for himself as an able pilot and pavigator by succt:issfully bringing home the Victoria. One of the members of the expedition was a young man named Andres de Urdaneta. Urda not a, like many o. young man of his time, was full of the spirit of adventure. IIe joined -47the expedition desirous of seeing new lands and strange peoples in the East, The Loaisa expedition, with all the preparations made to assure its success, came to an inglorious end. l'ilisfor- tune and. disaster awaited it on the long and arduous way to the· East. Tho fleot left the port of Corufia on July 24, Even before the Strait ,of Magellan _was reached, 1525. three ships had been lost, - two were wrecked and one deserted. Later, aft8r the passage of the Strait had been accomplished, another ship was forced to separate from the fleet. Shortly after the fleet entered the Pacific Ocean, a series of misfortunes befell the expedition in rapid suc- cession. Four hundred leagues from the Strait of Magellan Loaisa died July 30, 1526. His successor, Sebastian del Cano, also died a few days after assuming command. The third commander, Toribio de Salazar, died September 15, 1526. The fourt in succession to the comniand of the ex- pedition, Martin de Iniguez, lived until July 11, 1527, when he, too, died. The last commander, Hernando de 1::t Torre, succeeded" in bringing the flent to one of the Moluccas Islands, but no better luck awaited him there. He and his companions fell into the hands of the Portuguese. Of the original 5 roup that started on the venture, only a few lived to tell the story of this. ill-fated expe- -48dition. One of them was Andres de Urdaneta. He and the other :survivors returned to Spain in 1536. An important source of information on the Loaisa expedition is the account written by Andres de Urdaneta.. This was published in Spain shortly upon Urdaneta's return from the East in 1536. 1 In this account, Urdaneta m&de some in- teresting observations regarding the lands he visited in the East, thGir .natural productions, and the customs and peculiarities o.f their inhabitants. 'l'he .following are por- tions of his observations on Mindanao and the Moluccas: Arriving at Bendanao (l\fd.ndanao), we anchored at th.e port of' Bizaya. 2 Later on we :v-mnt ashore in a sir..all ho.at to trade with the inhabitants of the place. 'The latter h.ad swine and hens, but' they would not .sell any of these to u.s. These neople are well dressed. Thev wear cotton and silk clothes and satins from ,Cnina. In this island of Bendanao there is much gold.. They offered to sell to us a quantity of' this metal. Here we l - It bears the title "Relacion del Viaje de la Armada del Comendador Ga d,e Loaisa a la.s Islas de la Espe,ceceria ••• " It was published in Valladolid, Feb. 28, 1537. The document is folli-id in Goleccion de Doc. Ina&tLtos dnl Real Archivo de Ind.l.e.s, vol. 5, Madrid, 1666. ' 2 - The identity o:f this port is not rnowJ1. The expedition touched at. various places on the eastern coast of Mindanao but thf'.re is no port at pre3ent unoer that name anyt-"1here in Eastern Mindanao. Urdaneta, however, state,o that "forty leagues from there {the port o.f Eizaya) we came t,o another island which is called Talao .• u Urdaneta was referring here to Talaud, and island south of l\!iJnciianao. On the basis of this ref'crenc e, it can be said that the J)ort of Bizaya must have b.e,en located somewhere on the southeastern coast of W.d.ndanao. -49got an Indian whom we brought to Maluco. The latter told us that every year two junks from China came to the place to buy gold and pearls of which there is an abundc1nce. Cinnamon also abound in the western part of the island ••• The island of Maluco which produce qloves are Tidore, Ter:renate,. l,Iotil, lV"mquian, and Bcichan ••• In this five islands eleven thousand six hundred quintales more or less of cloves are raised every year ••• If it should please Your Majesty to order the establishment of trade with f,'Ialuco, to the end that all the cloves, nutmegs, and mace gathered in those islands could be brought to Espana, then of necessity a,11 those who wish to buy these articles will have to go to wherever Your Majesty commands that the tr~ffic in these articles be made. For Your Majesty should know that nowhere else in the known world 8re cloves, nutmegs, and mace produced. Therefore, to Your Majesty those islands of Maluco and Banda should bo of great interest for from spic os alone they bring an income of more than 600,000 ducados a year ••• 2. The Saavedra Expedition Two other expeditions were despatcbed to the East subsequent to the departu.re of Loaisa: the Sebastian Cabot ex- pedition, dispatched from Seville, Spain, on April 13, 1526, and the Saavedra expedition, whie·h was launched from Mexico, on October 31, 1527. The Cabot exp edition coD.sisting of four ships and 250 men .failed to ruach its destination. After spending three years exploring the eastern coast of South America in a futile attempt to discover a shorter route to the East, fi3hting hostile Indians, and searching -50for gold, it returned to Spain, arrj_vj_ng there j_n August, 1530 I ThG Saavedra expedition was prepared by Hernando Cortes, Viceroy of Mexico, in compliance with an order from Charles I, It.was the first Spanish venture to the East to be launched from the New \Jorld. · Placed under the command of Alvaro cle Saavedra, cousin 0£' Cortes, the expedition set out to accomplish four objectives: (1) to rescue Juan Serrano and other Spaniards who had been loft irt Cebu in 1521; (2) to look for the Trinidad, one of the vessels in the Magellan expedition; (3) to find out what befall th8 Cabot expedition; and ( 4} to follow up the Loa is a expedition and render to it whatever assistance it 9eeded. Saavedra brought with him a letter from Hernan Cortes, Viceroy of Nueva Eapafia, for delivery to the King of Cebu. In that letter, Cortes expressed, ir1 the na;ne and on behalf of the King of Spain, hj_s regrets for Mavella.n' s actuations in Cebu. "The King grieved, n Cortes wrote, 11 at having a captain who departed from tho royal commands and i11structions that ho c arriE'd, E'Dpecially in his havi1~ s t;irred up war or discord with you and yours. 11 Cortes also requeoted the release of Spaniards held captives/ by the Kinr; of Cebu. 11 This Emperor our lord, Ii he vn·ote, "will be rnuch pleased if you will deliver to this capt,::in (Saavedra) any of the -51Spaniards who are still alive in your prison. a ransom for it, he shall give it If you wish you at your pleasure and to your satisfaction. 111 With three ships and 110 men the 3aa~odra expedition I sailed ·from the port of Zaguatanejo, Mexico •. Like the Loaisa expedition befor:a it, it met with misfortune and disaster on the- way. Somewhere in the @id-Pacific, two of Saavedra's vessels were wrecked. With only one vessel with him, Saavedra succeeded in reaching Mindbnao, but he was unable to go to Cebu as he had planned to do in fulfiJ.lment of one of the objectives of his expedition. His lone vos- sol was swept by strong winds to 'Ticlore, one of t,ho Moluc- cas islands. pedition. Here he met the remna.nt,'3 of the Loaisa exAfter staying for about two months in Tidor.(:), Saavedra prepared to go back to Mexico. tined, however, to see Mexico again. He was not d.3s ... He ~ied at sea, Octo- _________ ber 9, 1529. 2 , 1 .. The full te.xt of the letter is in B. & R.~ Vol. 2, p. 39, ff. 2 - An important source of informntion on the Saavedra expedition is the account written b;r Vivencio de Napoles entitled "Relacion Hecha:J por Vivencio de Nnpoles, del Vinj e que Hizo la armada que Hernan Cortes Envio en Bu.sc:1 de las _Islas de la Especeria, 11 It i~3 found in Martin Fe1~nandoz de 11Jnvarr2t e' s Col ecc ion de los v;i.aj_Q_s y d.~Q.f.ubrimiontos_(;J_gQ hicieron ~or r~iar los · espafiol es deseu: mes del sip:lo. XV., voJ • 5, Madrid, 1 37. -523. The Treaty of Zaragoza Spain's venture in the East with the Magellan expedition g~ve rise to a dispute between Sp,::lin and Portugal over the ownership of thE1 Moluccas ond other isLn1cJs in the East, Sp~in claimed thot those lands were within the Spanish side of the line of demarcation as fixed by the Treaty of Tordesillas. Portugal on the othor hand, rnuint:;ainecl that tho lands in question rightly' belonged to her by reason of prior discovery and occupation. Two conferences were held in 152t,.. to sGttle the controversy, - one at Victoria, Spain, in February 1524, and another at Badajoz, Ap:cil 11 to May 31, 152li-~ 1fo satis - fc1ctory result c2.rne out of them. In,1529, the two nations finally were able to reach an agreement. By this time, Spain was no longer in a mood. to make :further attempts at colonisation in the .East. She had incurred heavy expenses in fit ting out the Loaisn, Cabot, and Saav-edra expeditions and up to that tim0, no favorable report had been received from o.ny of them. Under the circumstances, Spain was in- clined to @.gree to relinqui:Jh wh::i.tcver rj_,~;1t:J she claimed in the East especially if in so doinz she could obtain n ,... lar~e sum of money from Portugal. I The Treaty of Zaragoza, conl uded April 22, 15 ;29, reprt::s ent cd a v\li thdi-awal on the part of Spain, at least for the t irne boi:r,_3, from further -5;colonial ventures in the East. Important provisions of the Treaty are the following :1 Inasmuch as there existed a doubt between the said Emperor c:md King of Castilla, otc., and the said King of Portugal, etc., concerning the ownership, possession, and rights, or possession or quRsi posses,sion, navigation, and trade of Maluquo and other islancis and seas, which each one of the said lords, the emperor and king of Ur:sti.lla and the- King of Portugal declaret, ns his, both by virtue of the treaties mad.e by the most exalted, powerful, and Catholic sovereigns, Don Fernando and Dona Isabel, I'1;lers of Castil]_a, grandparents of the said emperor and the King, Don Joam the Second of Portugal (may they rest in glory} about the demarcation of the Ocean Sea and by virtue of other rights and privile1es -which each one of the said emperor and monarchs asserts to belong and pertain to said islands, seas, and lands belonging to him of which he is in possession; the said emperor and monarchs have covenanted and agreed as to the said doubts and disputes in the follcwinp; form and ,nanner: First, the said grand. cha:nc ollor, the bishop of Osma and th(~ commcmder-in-c:1ief of C&latrava, attorneys of the said empe~or and sovereign of Castilla declared that they, in his nai:1e, and by virtue of their said po111;er of attorney woulcl sell and in fact did sell from this dD_y and. for all time, to the said King of Portugal, for hLn and all the successors to the crown of his kingdoms, all rights, action, dominion, 01-mership, o.nd possession o::."' quasi possession, and .s.11 rights of nnvigation, traffic, and tr2de in any ri12nnor whatsoever; that th0 said 8mp2ror and king of Castilla declares that he holds and could holJ howsoever and j_n whatsoever manner in the said ¥.iB luquo, islcrnc.s, places, lands, and seas, as will be declared hereafter; this, with the Jecla- tne -------1 - B. & R., vol, 1. The treaty w3s ratifi(Jd by King Charles I of Spain the day following the signing of the Treaty. King John III ratified it later on June 20, 1530. -54rations, limitations, conditions, and clauses contained and stated hereunder for the sum of three hundred and fifty thousand ducats of :old,2 paid in the current money, of gold or silver, ec18h ducat being valued in Castilla at three i11mclred nnd seventy-five maravcdis .3 Th.0 ,suid Kin§': of Portugal will rive tmd. p,:ly this amou11t to the sc1id empcr?r and King of Castilla, r-:.nd to r, he pors,:ms whom his Majesty may appoint, iL t!1e followin;; nwnnar: one hundred and fifty tho1rnand ducat:J to be paid at Lixbona, within tL.e :f:.rst :ifteen or t,:wnty days after this contrnct, confirmed by the cciid emperor and king of Castilla, shall have arrived at the T • b oa, or w:1erev9:.;_~ · , v· c1· ty o f ....,1::-~tno sa1.a. .\.:i..ng 01" F ortug.11 may be; t~iirty tLousanci ducats '~o be paid in Castilla - twent.v thousand at VaJ_hadolid and ten thousand at SeviJ.12, by the twent:.eth day o:r:: the month of Ma:" of this present year; s evcnty thous- and. ducats to j e paid in Castill,'.J. at the May fair of Medin1 dol C::impo oJ' this same year, et ·1::,110 tarms of the po.yrnents of s,J.id fair; and the hund:ced thousand ducats remainin~ 2t tig October fair at the said l::,own of I,fodina de2.. Carroo of tld.s s-:'une year, at the t 3rr.'iS of the)· pay:::nei1t of the SF1.Lle - all to be paid over and :1bove the rate of exchange •••• The afon~scid stile is n:ad8 t:y th,~ said emperor and king of Cnstillr~ to the said King of Portugal on condition that, at 1vhc'. t eve:'.'.' t imr.3 the snid emperor and King of 8astilla or his succc~ssors, s1:10uJ.d wish to ruturn, and should retu:cn, all o.f the ,a.1.:ld three hundrGd and fifty tnousanj duc1tr., wit,)-wut any shortage to the said King of Portugal or his successors, the El.Sid sale becomes null. and void ,'Ute! each ona of the said sovereigns shall enjoy the right and authority which lie no·;,·J holds &a·nJ c1aim.J to :10::'..d, both as regards the right of p-o::;ress:icn '.)I' cm3.:-;,:'_ r:;os,session, and as recards the proprietorsh::.p' howsoevm· and in whatever manner t h0:· b':;lons ·c0 hic11, 2.s if . concl'.'ac ' t ,·-Jere no t mci.uo, -l ' ' • th 1s · 11-ir_,~ J•.. n -c.nc m.1.nrer in· which they first held possossion nnd cJ.aL11eC. to hold it, and this contract. sha1.l Ccl11SG no p1·ejudicG or innovation. 1 2 - A "ducatn \·ms a gold coin worth, in former times, about $2.2C79, or about ?4.57 Philip~ine 8urrency. 3 - Maravedi \vaE a di)anish co:pper coiu int:coduced by Ferdinand and Isabella. It was wol'th nomin?.lly 1/34 real. -55It§.!12: It is covenanted and agreed by the snid attorneys, in the names of their said constituents, that, in order to ascertain what islands, places, lands, sens, and their rights and jurisdiction, are sold, henceforth .and forever, by the said em1.Jeror and Eing of Castille, by this contract under the aforesaid (jondition, to the said King of Portugal, a line must be detorminod from pole to pole, that is to say, from north to south, by a semicircle oxtendine northeast bv east ninetoon degrees from Maluquo, to which number of degrees corrt~spond 0.l1:1.ost seventeen degrees on the equinoctial, amounting to two hundred and ninety-seven and one-half leagu0s east of the islands of Muluquo, allowing seventeen and one-half leaguos to an equinoctial degree. In this northeast by east meridian and direction are situated the islands of Las Velas and of Santo Thome, through which the said line and semicircle passes. Since these islands are situated and ere distant from :Maluquo tho said distance, more or less, the deputies determine and agree that the said line be drawn at the said two hundred and ninety-seven and one-half J_e2.gue.s to the east, the equiv,alont of the nineteen degrees northeE,st by east. from the scdd islands of' I,1aluquo, r;,he 3,,; d der,utJ· """ d·<:iCl 'll'8·' +-h· t in as a.L~"'o1~esa1.· ., • d t .J. order to ascorta:i.n where t.hs ssid lino should be drawn, two charts of tlie sqrne tenor be n1c1dc, conformable to the cha.rt iP the Indic1 Hou~-e of Trade at Sevilha, and by which the fleets, vassals and subjects of the said emperor and king of Castilla navigate. Within thirty days from thf~ date of this contract two persons shall be a9;)ointed by each side to examine the a.foresaid ch,,1rt and n:ako the two copies aforesaid conformable to it. In them the said line shall bG drawn in ti1e manner aforesaid; and they shall b o signed h:T the said sovereigns, and sealod with their· sea~s, so that each one will keep his own chart; ani the said line shall remain fixGd henccfo~th at the ooint and place so designated. This chart shall also designate the spot in which the said vassals of the emperor and king of Castilla shall situate and locate l\:Jaluquo, which durinc; the time of this contract slwll be regarded as situatGd in such place, although in truth it is situated mo:r,e or less distance enstward from the place that is deLl- .:·· .t;.:\.,) . ._. ,,_... ~. :._, 1 Cl ' signated in the said charts. The seventeen degrees eastward shall be drawn from the point where Mnluquo is situateu in said charts, For the good of this contract the s:1id Kine; of Portugal must have said chart, and in case the aforesaid be not found in the House of Trade of Sevilha, the said persons appointed by the said sovereigns shall make said charts within one month, signed and sealed as aforesaid. Furthermore navi2:ation charts sh:111 be made by them, in which the said line shall b,:3 drawn in the manner· aforesaid, so that henceforth the snid vassals, natives, and s 11bjects of the said emperor and king of Castilla shall navigate by them; and so that the navigators of eitrFir part shall be certain of the location of the sc1id line and of the aforesaid distanc~ of the·two hundred and ninetys even and one-half leagues between the said line and Maluquo. Item: It is covenanted and agreed, that, in all the islands, lands, and seas within the said line, the vessels and people of the said emperor and king of Castilla or of b-is subjP.cts, vassals or natives of his kingdom, or any others (al·i:,hough this latter be not his subjects, vassals, or natives of his. kingdoms) shall not, with or without his command, consent, favor, and a:i.d, enter, navigate, barter, traffic, or t&ke on board anything whatsoever thc~t ma;rbe in said isl,-=tnds, lo.rids or seas. Whosoever shall henceforth violate any of the aforesaid provisions, or who shall be fo;rn.d within said line, shall be seized by any captain, captains, or people of the said King of Portugal and shall be tried, chastised and punisi.iecl by the said captains, as privateers and violators of the peace. Should they not be found inside of said line by the sEdd captains or people! of the said King of Portugal D nd should come to any port, land, or seigniory whatsoeve:t~ of the S-'iirl. emperor and king of CastilJ.a, the saj_d em9eror and king of Castilla, by his justices in that place, shall b"i obliged and bound to take and hold them. In the meantime the warrants and exarninatio11s proving their gu:Ll t in each of the above-said things, shall b (: sent by the so.id King of For"tu,:--~ci.l, or by his justices, and they shall be puujshed and chastised exactly as evil-doers and ~iolators of the peace and faith. -57Jtem: It is covenanted and· agreed by said deputies t~at tho said emperor and king of Castilla shall not, personnll.y or through an agent, send the natives of his kingdoms, his vassals, subjects, or aliens (and althol:tr•'h these latter be not natives of his kingdoms, or his VDE,sals or subjects), t,o the said islands, lands, and seas within said line, nor shall be consent nor give them aid or favor or permit thf~m to go th1:Jre, contrary to th0 form and determination of this contract. Rother he shnll bo obliged to, forbid, suppress, and prevent it as much as possible. Item: It is covorwntod thut the said 0mp,9ror and ki.n2: o.f Castilla command letters and instructions to be given inUil!:3diateJ.y to his Gaptain:::: and subjects who are in thcj said islands that thuy do no more trading henceforth and return nt once, provided that they be allowed to bring f rcely wln:te'ler goods they shall have already bartered, traded, und taken on board. ··~ Item: It was covena~ted and agreed by the said deputies in the names of their said--conE:tituents that the t roatiet3 ne?:otiat ed b r:/.~wCEm tl!8 said C,1thol ic sovereigns, Don fornando and Dona Ysabel and the King of Jonrn the Second of :?ortugal in regard to the demarcation of the Ocean G,:::a s1.1a::i.1 rernnin valid .c:1.nd binding nin toto 11 .snd in every partiGu:1.ar, no is therein contained end declared, excepting those things which are othervds e covenanted and agreed upon in this co:1tract. In case the said emperor and king of Castilla returns the sum ~hich accordin,cz: to this corri:iract i.s to be e:ivon in tr:'J manner aforesaid, thus canceJ.ing the·--~,nle, the S·'licJ t:roaties negotiated b etw00n th<~ tia id Celt l1t)l :Le .'3ovun~ie:ns Don F'ornando and Don::i. Ysa'Jol and the :--;aj_d K:Lne: Dorn Joam the Socond of Purtufal, sha::'..J. re,.in_j_n in full fore e and power, Ei.S if this contr,,' et ',J0.1·e not nndo; and the s::i.id conDtit11or1ts shc:::11 be o·:):LJ.gcd to cor:1ply wtt.h it in every re6pe..;t, as is churcin stated. • •• -584, The Villalobos Expedition The return of Urdaneta to Spain in 1536 and the pub- lication a year later of a report of his experiences in the East served to draw public attention once rrore to tl1e lands and peoples of the Far Enst. For one. t ~1ing, it reawakened Charles I's interest in Spanish colonial entorprise in that I part of the world. Shortly after Urdaneta's return, Charles I gave ordors to the Viceroy of Nueva Espafla, Antonio de Mendoza, to despatch a new exr.edition to the East, The treaty of Zaracoza, which had assigned all lands lying west of a line 297-1/2 lnagues east of tlrn :Moluccas to Portugal, was still in existence. Apparently, King Charles I, in ratifying the treaty, did so with some mental rossrva- tions. It would seem that he did not consider the treaty as having at all u.xtinc;u.:i.shed Spain's rights to the lnnds discovered by Magr:~11an and formally taken possession of by the Spaniards for the Xing of Spain. In compliance with the King' :3 orders, a floet of six ships, ce1rryi.ng three hundred men, sail 0d fr-0111 l\!avidad, Mexico on Novemb 13r 1, 1542, In command of thf~ e::.q,edit:Lon was Ruy Lopaz de Villalobos, brot]11:)r-in-law of Viceroy ' ( f -59Mendoza. ono, 1 The voyage a9ross the Pacific was a pleasant On the way the Spaniards discovered Palau and several other islands of the Carolinas Archipelago. On February 2, 1543, the fleet reached the eastern coast of Mindanao. At Sarangani, Villalobos started to build a colony, putting his men to plant food crops. Villalobos' men, however, did not find tilling the soil much to their likinr;, saying that they hnd come "not to plant, but to make conquests, t1 colony experienced many hardships. The Food was scarcu and Villalobos was forced t.o send out ships to ncighbod.ng islands in search of provisions. Of the hard.ships endured by Villalobos' mon at S,-:iran- gani, Fray Geronimo Santisteban gave a vivid account in a letter he wrote to the Viceroy of Spain in February, 1547. Among other thingf:, Fray Sat.isteben wrote: 2 If I should try to write to your 1ordship in detail of the l1unier, need, hardships, disoase d"'atl·1c• r:,i· u-.~ Q"'l'·;,r:,n•,·,n I ar... d +11~-' u v , .... ·'··l-,"+· l.1J.!ov ·1-".) auF'"",---.I~"'a' n,J .J.C:-l:-[:J~ ) would fill a boo!;: • • • In that island we found a 1 ~ ~ 1./'1,._, 1o-.! .L.i.t; t,:; J.ittlo rice .snd tingo, n few hens and hogs, and three deer, Tldr; w;:rn eaten in a few dE:ys, together with what remained of the sldp foou, A nurn-~ ber of cocon-palms were discovered; ~nd because hunger ca,nnot s u.:c'i'er delay, the buds wldch are the-'? shoots of the palms were eaten. There were some l - The command of the expedj_tion was first offered to Pedro de Alvarado. Upon the latter's death, Andres de Urdaneta was asked to t.a lrn command. Urdm1E~tn declined the off e1', whereupon Villalobos was chosen. 2 - B, &. R.Vol. 2, P• 65. -60figs and other fruits. Finally we ate all the dogs, cats and rats we could find, besides horrid grubs and unknown plants, which all together caused the deaths, and rauch of the prevnlent disease. . And especially they ate large ni1mbers of a certain large variety of gray lizard, which emits considerable glow; very few who ate them are living. Land crabs also were eaten which caused same to go mad for a day after pnrtaking of them, especially if they had eaten the vitals. At the end of seven months, the hunger that had caused us to go to Sarrngan withdrew us thence. After about eight months in Sarangani, Villalobos, despite his instructions to the contrnry, decided to go to the Moluccas. He reached Tidore April 24, 1544, and his men fell into the hands of the Portuguese. Here he Villa- lobos was put aboard a Portuguese vessel to be returned to In Amboina he contractGd illness f:com wl1ich he died Spain. (1546). He was assisted in his dying moments by Francis Xavior, a ,Jesuit missionary, the future St. Francis Xavier, "Apostle of the Indies • 11 Xavier was in the Moluccas at that time engaged in Apostolic work. Although the Villalobos expedition like its predeces- 5ors failed in its mission, it had one notable accomplishment to its credit: it_ guve to the Philippines a. new name, Felipinas, from [elipe_, the name of Charlec I's son and heir to the Spanish throne. FeJJ.:.]_i1l.fil?_ was originally ap- plied to some islands in the Leyte-S~mar regJon, but in its modified form E,ilipi™, it was later :;:;iven as a per- -61nianent name ta the entire archipelago 5. .3 The Legazpi Expedition The failure of the ViJ.lalobos expedition had guit.e a sobering oflect upon CtarJ.es I's colonial ambitions. It dampened his ardor and enthusiusrn for the extension of Spain's colonial crnp:i.ro in the En st. Up to the year of his abdic,qtion (1558), no new colonir:11 V(Jnture wns under- taken, It remained for his son and successor, Philip II, aftor whom the PhiliDpin911 had been named, to bring to n realization his cherisLE:d clr(,am and ambition - the fo1mding of a rermlmc:nt Sp,mish colony in the Far East, Three yGars aftor his acc(~.ssion as King of Spain (1556), Philip II took tb0 inj_tia1 steps towards the eventual ful- fillwent of th0 Spanish dreRm of empire in the East. In September 1559, he wrote) a lettr:~r to the Viceroy of Mexico, Luis de IJoJ.asco, inst!~uct:Lng h:im to prepare a new expcdition to tho E3st. Velasco was ordorod to despatch two 3 - ':'here arc two important sources or information ori the Villalobos Gxpedition.· One is a lotte:)r written by Fray Geronimo do Sant.j_stobnn datec. lobruary 22, 154-7, to the viceroy o.f New ~Jpain, Snntist:ilx:m 1;,-Jf.H"l in the expedition of Villalobos. The other 1s Garcia Duscal~nte Alvarado's Relac::;_on dcJ__y_L,.)~~dG Ruy_g.91nQ.&.J..~ic) de VDlalop_Q.§_, Lisboa, l .o de at~o~,1-.0, 154-8 ;r Those accounts aro found in the Co 1 e c flQ.Q d c Do c 1lllifllG_QJl In.2..cJH~ Q.Q., -62ships "for the discovery of the Western islands toward the Moluccas.rr In another letter written at the sawe timEi, the King invited. Andres de Urdaneta to join the proposed expedition. Urdaneta was at that time living in an Agustinian convent in Mexico. He had entered the r'E')ligious life not long after he returned to Spain fr~m the ill-fated Loo.isa cxpedition. Now well advanced in years, ho expected to spend the rest of his life in retirement in the simple and poace- ful surroundings of the Agustinian community in Mexico. But his reputation as a cosmographor o.nd as a navigator had not been forgotten. The King was awRre that the services of a man of Urdaneta's knowledge, ability and experience were greatly needed to inJure the success of the proposed exp edit ion. The King's let tor must have touched a responsive chord in UrdanetE,' s hoart. Despj_t e the handicaps of age and thG inconvenience of having -'..~o go out again into the world at the sacrifice of the peact~ and quiet of community life, h·J accepted the 1 1 oyal invitation, :placing him~;elf entirely at tho service of His l.1.·1.jesty. It may be presumed that he found in the King:' s offer a nc•,J opportunity, not onJy to serve his King and his country, but God Him.self. For hG was aware of the fact that an importc:mt objective of the ""PJ.. t ·.: ·;'..rr 'j . ,, - ·j ., j'. entqrpripe 1-ia;:, .t.h~;·~_xtens:i9r1 of ,:t_he .,Christian faith to -.r, .", :/:;;•).'' !~ (,'. ,_./ ·'"•" .,:; I ,.·~-,_i. _;l_ :. : :.~•; -~··;:_;,·, l the inhabitants of the Ind~es. Five y~ars we;r,e. spent, ·in· prepa;ring for the pew ven.. , ·,.. : -·' . _; .. - ,.~, } , r ;. ., . . .' C : .: :·1 ; '.·1 ture. • -, .- In November, 1561+, the fleet that was to carry the exP,edi tionary ,;forc.e was' ready· .to sail. • •.. ' . ' . • ; .. . !. '; : ~ I ! • ; '-~ -I Instructio!ls. ,· had been drawn up and a commander had been chosen. On Father Urdaneta' s recommer1dation,, Mit:,uel Lopez de Legazpi was appointed commander-in-chief of the expedition. Father Urda net a himfrn1f was made chief pilot of the fleet, cho.rged with ·t:he important mission of bringing the expedition safely to its intended destination. No better men could have been chosen to lead the expedition than Father Urdaneta and tegazpi. · Both per- formed the tasks assigned. to them efficiently ani1 well. Father Urdaneta piloted the fleet, ,with great skill and succeeded where his predec~ssors had failed. Moreover, in compliance with royal_. instrui::t10ns, he charted a safe rout0 for vessels to follow in crossing--thG Pacific on. their way back to' Espana f1"0,m the Philippinos. Legazpi, like Father Urdancta, was quite advanced in years when he received the appoint1118nt to lead the new exp~dition to tho East. A native of Zumarraga, Guipuzcoa, -64Spain,- he had left Spain as a young man to find fame and fortune in the New World. He was not quite successful in his quest of material wealth, but in his actuations as a humble employee in the Ayuntnmientq o~ Mexico.he acquired a reputation for honesty, patience, tact-, and loyalty to duty.4 His known qualities and virtues made him fully deserving of the important post to which he was appointed. Chivalrous, courageous, upright, steadfast in his loyalty and devotion to God and Country, Legazpi was a worthy representative of the best type of Spanish character of his age, an age which produced Miguel Cervantes de Saavedra, Ignatius Loyola and Saint Teresa of Avila. In his dealings with the Filipinos, he invariably displayed a spirit of good will and conciliation. ' ' He sought ' to sec'ure his obj actives without undue resort to threats, display of force, or unnecessary sacrifice of human lives. To him belongs mucl'l ~_he crodit for the establishment on firm and permanent foundations of Sp,anish rule in the Philippines, On September 1, 1564; the Audiencia of Nueva Espana gave the neceGsary instructions to c;uide Legazpi in the expedition. Among oth~r things, L6gazpi wa~ instructed 4 - For nearly thirty years he served as scrivener (escribano) of the ayuntamiento of the city of Mexico. -65to proceed with the fleet 11 in search of and to discover the Western Islands .situat0d toword the Malucos, but you shall not in any way or manner enter the island of the said Malucos, ••• but you shall enter other :islc1nds con.tiguous to thGm, as for instance the Filipinas, and others outside the said treaty, [Zaragozg_7 Emd within his majes- ty's demarcation, and which are reported olso to contain spice. 11 • Two nfonths lator, thn flt~et car:cying the expe- dition sailed from the port of Navidnd, The story of -~ho Legazpi 0xpodition is told by Legazpi himself in a letter which he wrote from Cebu in 1 1565. The letter in port read as follows: I wrote to your excellency from Puerto de la Navidad giving as full an account as possible up to that port. Now I shall d0 the same, for I consider it a debt justly du~, and I shail always consid'3r it so whenever the opportunity i'.)rcsents itself. I am enjoying good hoclth, thanks be to our Lord; and the same can be snid of the whole canp, a thing ·which ought not to b 13 looked upon as of little importance. :May our Lord grant to your _excellency the good he::ilth that I wL,h. On Tuesday, November 21, _'three hours before dawn, I set s:d.l with tno fleot th1·i::. 1,vas at. Puerto de Navidad. For five days the fleet sail E:d. southwcst, but on the sixth w <J directed our course westward until we reached the ninth degree. We sailed on in this latitude in search of the island of Los Reyos, in orde~ that-we -------·--1 - Letter B • a.: t. R • , VO 1 • writtE:n by Legazpi to Viceroy of Mexico, 2~ , p • --~oc f'·"' ..L 7 ·; ..L • -66might go from that point to the Felipinas. A week after we hhd taken this course, we awoke· one morning and missed the vatache "Snn Lucas," with Captain Don Alonso de Arellano in command. Thero had been no stormy weather to make it lose sight of us; nor could it have been Don Alonso' s fault, for he wa.s a gallant man, as ho showed. It is believed that it was due to the malice or intent of the pilot. And as he had already been informed nbout-the expedition that we were· making, and the course we were to sail, and as he was fully instructed o.s to what he must do in case he should lose sight of us (as actually happened), and whither he must proceed to await us, we expected all the time that we would find the vessel in some of these islands. But ~p to this time we have heard nothing of it, which gives me not a little uneasiness. After the fleet had sailed for fifty days in the same course between nine and ten degrees, a degree more or less, we reached land, which proved to b c an island inhabited by poor and naked fishermen. This island was about four leagues in circurnference.t and had a population of about two hundred men. That same day we sailed between two other small islands, which were uninhabited and surrounded by many reefs, which proved very troublesome to uo for five or six days. At the end of that time we decided that the fleet should continue its course along the thirteenth degree of latitude; so that we might strike a better land of the Filipinas, which the pilots were finding already, and should not strike Vindanao. 1:l e followed our course in this latitude, and on Monday, January 21, we came in sight of land, which after ... ward proved to be one of the Ladrones Islands, called Gua. ·we directed our bows to that island, but we were no more than two leagues from it when fifty or sixty praus under sail surroun"ed the fleet. These Qrq,us-wore furnish':ld with la.teen sails of palm mats and were as light as the wind; this is a kind of boat that sails with remarkable speed, either with the wind or at random. In ecch cm1oe were from six to eight Indians, al togothGr naked, covering not even the privy parts, which men are wont to cover. They laughed aloud, and each of them made signs -67inviting us to his own town {for they were from different villages) and promising to give us food there, At break of day we coasted the island and th0 next morning we cast anchor in a very good port, The day had scarcely begun when a great number of those prRus appeared about us, There were so m~ny of them, who came to trade with us, that some of our men who counted them affirm that there were more than four or five hundred of them around the ships. All that they had to sell us were articl~s of food, namely, potatoes, rice, yams, cocoa-nuts, sugar-cane; excelle11-t bananas, and several other kinds of fruit. They also brought ging-er, which grows in this island in so great quantity that it is a thing to wonder over; and they do not· till or cultivate, but it· comes up and grows of itself in the open fields, just as any other herb, The natives shouted at us, each one inv~ting us to buy of him •••• This iGland is called Ladrones, which according to the disposition of the inhabitants, is the most appr-opriate name that could have been given it. Eleven days c).fter reaching this island, we set sail following our course in the aforesaid latitude. After sailing eleven days more with good weather• we finally came in sight of Filipinas, where we finished our voyage, According to the experiments and opinions of the pilots, we covered more than two thousand leagues from Puerto de la Navidad to this island, although I have heard that they were deceived as to the distance. On the afternoon of the same day in which we came to this land, we cast anchor in a beautiful bar, called Cibabao, and there we remained seven or eight days. Meanwhile we sent two boats, one south and the other north (for this island is located north and south) to see whether they could find some good port or river. One of them returned minus a gentl cman of my company, called Francesco Gomez, and with the report that, for ten leagues north, they had found neither port nor rivor. The gentleman was killed by some Indinns, a.ft Gr he disembarked to make bl,oodfriendship with them, a ceremony that is considered inviolable. This is observed in this manner: on.::i from ench party mu~t draw two or three -68drops of blood from his arm or breast and mix them, in the same cup? with water or wine. Then the mixture must be divided equally between two cups, and neither person may depart until both cups are alike drained. While this man was about to bleed himself, one of the natives pierced his breast ,from o,ne side with a lance ..... Leaving this bay, we sailed south until we reached the end of the island, where the land turns west. Just south of this island are other islands between which this island there is a straight channel running west. The fleet passed through this channel, and on the second day from our departure from Cibabao, after having sailed no8rly thirty lea~ues, we reached a port of Tandaya island. In this port a small river empties itself into the sea through an estuary. Some of our boats sailed up this river and anchored at the town of Cangiungo, The natives received them neither with peace nor war; but they gave our men food and drink, When they were about to eat, an Indian came to them, who spoke a few words in the Castilian tonp:ue, saying "Comamosvr (let us eat"), "bebamo srr { :riot us drink"}, and answering "sf' ( "yes;1 }, when questioned by Anton Batista Billalobos (Villalobos)~ and "Captain Calabaea." It seems that he had traded with the people of the .fleet of Billa_lobos, according to what was gathered from him. And because he said this, this native vexed the ruler of the village, and never eume back. The next day I wished to -go to the same village, and found the nativeG hostile. They made signs that we should not disembark, pulled grass, struck trees with their cutlasses, and threateningly mocked us, s·eeing that in this caso cajolery could not suffice, we withdrew in order not to disturb then; but .s.s we departed, they began to shower sticks and stones nfter us, and I was obliged to order the soldiers to fire their arouebuses at them; and thoy never appeared again. This town has a population of twenty or thirty Indinns. On arri vins at that port, I despatched Captain do Goiti with a boat and a frigate, well -69supplied with men and provisions, to discover somo port along the coast. On the way ho was to examine thoroue;hly the town of Tandc1.ya, which was not very far from where we wers, and other towns of the island of Abbuyo. Dec0ived by the appearance of the coast, he sjiled on past the coast for fifteen len2;ues, without seeine; anything. Finally he reached a lar~o bay on which was situated a large town containing mc3.ny families; the peoplo hnd many swine and hens, with .J.bundcmce of rice cind potatoes. He returned to the fleet with this news, which gqve us not a little content, for all were lorn;ing for land-products. The fle~t left this port, and in the afternoon·of the next day we rCJcichod the abovementioned bay, where we anchored in front of the large town of Cavalian. One thing in especial is to be noted --- namely, that wherever w~ went, the people entertained us with fine words, and even promised to furnish us provisions; but afterward they would desert their houses. Up to the present, this fear has not been in any way lessened. When we asked the people of this village for friendship and food, they offered us all the friendship we desired, but no food whatever. '£heir attitude seemed to me to be ouito the contrary of what had been told me by fhose who had gone there; for they had said that, in this village of Cavalian, which is located on the island of Buyo, Spaniards were received anct·were well treated. Now they did not wish to see us, and on the ni1~ht of our arrival, we were made thoroughly aware o.f this; for they embarked with their wives, children, and property, and wont aNay, The next day, a chief called Canatuan, the son of I\ie.late2 who is the principal chief of the town, came to us; but I detained him in the ship, until provisions should b<e sent us from land (paying for them to their satisfaction), becnus e of his not returning to the villa,:se and because his father was very old and blind. But this proved no remedy, to make them give us anything but words. It was determined t.hat the people sl10uld go ashore* And so 2 - In the relation published in Col...!. doc. ined.,___Q:J:_tramar, ii, pp. 265-277, ·where these tran.sactions are re:counted in great er dE-)tai}., these namPs are spelled Camut 1.an (Camutuan, Camotuan), smd l•:aletcc, respectively. B.&R.,Notes. -70they went, and, we made a fine festival,. killi1;g for meat on that same day about forty-five swine, with which we enjoyed a merry carnival --- as payment for which articles of barter were given to the chief whom I had with me. rrhe lutter sent us ashore with an Indian, to give those articles to the owners of the swine. This chief, Canutuan, by signs and as best he could, informed me of the na,:1es of the isJ.ands, of their rulers and people of importance, and their number. He also·promised to take us to the island of Mancagua,3 v!hich was eight lcaguos from this island. We set sail with the Indian,·and when we reached :r.iiacagua r sent him three others, who went him to their village in a canoei after giving them some clothes. He 1-rns quite wJe 1 satisfied? according to his own ·words, and became our friend. This Macagua, although small, was once a thickly populated island. The Castilians who anchored there were wont to be kindly received.. i'Jow the island is greatly changed from former days, being quite depopulated -- for it contains less than twenty In• dians; and these few who are left, are so hostile to Castilians, that they did not even wish to see or hear us. From this island we went to another, called Canuguinen~4 Here we met with the sane treatment. As the natives saw our ships along the coast, they hastenecl to betake thernsel ves to the mountains. Their fear of the Castilians was so great, that they would not wait for us to give any explanation. From this islrind the fleet directed its, course towards Butuan, a provinco of the islo.nd of Vindanao; but the tides and cont r3.ry winds drove us upon the coast of an island called Bohol. Here we cast ancrior, and .-vithin a small bay of this island we made some necessary repairs to the i'lagsh:1,p. One 1 3 - Apparontly the same ,:ls the Massaua of earlier documents. Ibid. 4 - Inthe relation cited above, note 92, the name of this island is spelled (p. 277) Camiguinin. Ioid. -71morning the alm:iranta.5 sit_:hted a junk at some disThinking it to be one of the smaller :2,ralls., the master-of-camp despatched against it a small boat with six soldiers, after which he came to the flagship to inform me of what he had done~ Seeing thG.t he had not sent men enou.~h, I despatched another small ooat with all the men it could hold; and the maste1" ... of-cnmp himself with instructions how he was to procee~, reached the boat and junk, which W·2re exchangircg shots,. The junk seeing that the boat contC\ined so few men, defied thera, When the second bo:1t arrived it found sor:1e of the r.1en wounded, and that the junk had ;many and well-r:1ade arrows and lan~es 1 with a cul verin and some muskets~ The junk defied the second boat also. Shouting out in Castilian, "a bordol a bordol" (boardt boardI") They grappled it, and on boarding it, one of our soldiers was killed by a lance-thrust in the throat. 'I'hose aboard the junl·: numb2rod forty-five soldiers. Fourteen or fifteen of them jumped intO o. canoe whicb. thGy car::::'ied on ti1eir poop deck, and fled. Eigh or ten of t:1e others were captured alive, and the remainder wore :dlled, I have been assured· that they fought w::11 and bravely in their defense, as was quite 2pp3.r0nt; for besides the man they kilJ.ed, ~~hey nl so wou~ded more than twenty others of our soldiers. In the junk were found many white and colored blankets, some do.masks, almaizales6 of sill...: and cotton, and some figured silk; also iron, tin, sulphur, porcelain, some go:Ld, and rnany other things. Tbe junk ':vas tal:en to the fla.g,3hip. Its crew were Burnei l'roros. Thtdr property was returned to thera, .3nd v,hat appeared, in our reciconine;, its equivalent in arti- tance away. cles of barter was riven to them, because their capture was not induced by greed. My chief intent is not to go privateerinf, out to make treaties and to procure frhmcts·, of which I o:rn in great ·need. The Burneans were nuch pleased and satiDfied with 5 - Th·Jsecond ship of the fleet, "San Pnblo.n The "San Pedro" or flagship wo.s spoken of as the ca_pt!~.{l~· Ibi_<i., 6 - A veil of thin gauze worn by the Moros. Evidently the term is used in this connection, as thu I-'Iohamr.1edans of these islands were called Moros (Noors) by the Spaniards• Ibid~ --- -72this liberality displayed toward them, thus showing how fickle they were. On the same dav that the boats wept to the junk, I despatched the patach§. "San Joan" with orders to go to Butuan and sail along its coast, and to find out in what part of this island the cinnamon is gathered, for it grows there. They were also to look for a suitable port end shore where a settlement could be made. While the patache went pn this mission, I kept the boat of the Burne3ns and the pilot. This latter was a man of experience, and versed in different dialects; and he informed me of much regarding this region that I wished to know. A1aong other tnings he told me, that if the Indians of this isl2nd avoided this fleet so much, I should not be surprised, because they had great fear 0£ the name of C3.stilla. He s,;id that while 11Je were amon3 these islands no Indian would speak to us; and that the cause for this was that about two years ago, somewhat. more or less, some Portuguese from Ii!aluco visited these islands with eight large 12.rnus and many natives of 1'1aluco. Wherever they went. they asked for peace and friendship, saying that they 1:1ere Castilians, and vns3als of the king of Cetstilla; then when the nntives felt quite secure in their friendship, they assaulted and robbed them, killing and capturing all thnt they could. For this reason the isl 'J.nd of Macau:ua was depopulated, and scarcely any inh:1bit2nts remo.ined there. A:-1d in this island of Bohol, among the killed and captured were more than a thousand persons. Therefore the natives refused to seQ us and hid themselves - as in fact was the case. Although, on my part, I did my best, to gain their confidence, giving them to understand that the Portw~uese belong to a different nation and are subjects of n different king tl:an we, they did not trust ri1e; nor, was this sufficient, for they say that we have the same appearanc0, that we wear the samd kind of clothing, and carry the same weapons. In this island of Bohol live two chiefs, one called Cicatuna and the other Cigala, who through the Bornean's going inland to call them, came to the fleet. Fror.1 these chiefs I heard the same .,.'lj- thing that I had 'ueen told by the Burnei pilot and his companions, in regard to the great robberies that the Portur;ueso coff,mitted hereabout, in order to set the natives against us - so that, on our coming, we should find no friends. This fell out as·they ~ished, because, ali;;hour;h Cicatuna and Cigala r:1ade friendship with me, 1;Je could put no confidence in ther.i; ncr would they sell us anything, but only made promises. While in this island, I despatched a frigate to reconnoiter the coast of certain islands that could be seen from this island. The chief oilot and Joan d8 Aguirre accompanied it, and it was su.pplied with sufficient food, men, and provisionr3. Corning to the entrance between two islands, thoy were caught by the tide and drifted to the other entrance of the channel; and in 6rder to return, they sailed around the island. On this island they saw a t6wn where the Moro pilot declared that ho was known, and that he was on friendly terms with its inhabitants; but undar pretense of friendship, the nativGs treacherously killed him with a lance-thrusto The space of one week had been .ziven to then, but it took much longer; for the return could be accomplished only by ::;ailing aro1.md the island which was one hundred and fifty leagues in circumference. Whe~1 the pa tac~~ returned from Butuan, it reported that t:1e3' had seen the king, and that two Moro junks of the large and rich island of Luzon were anchored in the river 11J.-.tich flows near the town. The Moros sold our men a large quantity of wa::::.~ When the men of Luzon saw our tostonos they were very much pleased 1vith them, and they save nearly twenty , marks/ of gold, v-thich they had there in that island, giving for six toston.£§_ of silver one of gold; and they s&id' that they had more gold, if our rnen would give them more to St<211.§.§.., and that in exchD.n&;e fo3: the latter they ~ould give them ten or tw0lve quintals of gold which tl1ey had there in ·{ hat islo.nd. • •• Whilo in the bay of the island of Bohol, I was very anxious about the frigate, sine o it vJas to be gone but one week; while twenty-one days had passed, and it was now ho re to be seen. Meanv-1hile a nrau which I had despatched with two soldiers and the -74chiefs Cicatuna and Cigala to the island of Cubu to endeavor to ascertain some news concerning it 1 had returned, bringing no news whatever of its whereabouts. On Holy Saturday, three hours before daybreak, while we were thus plunged in great anxiety and grief, f ee.rin[:; that our companion~ r:.1j_ght have. been lost, captured, or killed, the srJ.out r1the frigate1 frigatet" w2s heard in our .fleet. Turning my glance, I beheld it entering the bay. Only the Burnei pilot was missing; the others looked well 3nd strong, although they had su:t'fered from hunger. On arriving, they informed us that the island which they ho.d coasted had a circuit of one ~rnndred and fifty leigues, and that on t½eir return they had 7 passed between it and the opposite coast of Cubu. They reported that this island of Cu.bu ·was densely populated, containing many large villa.rfes, · and among them were many pebple inhabiting the coast, and in~ land many cultivat,)d districts. The above-mentioned soldiers who "t·Jent to Cibu in the prau with Cicatuna and Cigal11 said that the same thing was to be obs~rved on the other coast, and that the port of the town of Cibu admitted of anchorage, and was excellent. I decic~ed to take the fleet to the.t island a pl~n I carried out, with the intention 6f requesting peace and friendship from the riatives, and of buying provisions from them at a reasonable cost. Should they refuse ~11 this I decided to n~ke war upon them - a step which I considered justifiable in the case of these people; for it was in that same port and town that Magellanes and his i'1eet were well received* King Sarriparra and nearly all the natives were baptized, and admitted to our holy faith and evangelical teaching, volunta:cily offering themselves as his majesty's vassals. Mae;allanes and more than thirty of his companions were afterwards killed while fi.zhting in behalf of thi,s island against the people of-}Jiatan, a t hiclcJ.y populated island situated near this ona. Afterward the two islands made peace privately between themselves, and the inhabitants of the toi,"Jn of Cibu 1.~illed many of the Spaniards, of the same fleet, and drove the remaining fei:J away from their land, Hence we see that all this is sufficient occasion for any course 7 - Apparently ref erring to the island of Negros. -75whatever. In accordance with this last opinion the fleet left the port of Bohol and we reached the port of Cibu on Friday, April 27, 1565. vfo had scarcely arrived when an Indian tame to the flagship in a canoe, who said that Tupas, the ruler of the island, was in the town, and that he was goir~ to come to the fleet to see me. A little later there came from the village, an Indian, an interpreter of the Malay languag0, who said, on oehalf of Tupas, that the latter was getting n:ady to come to see me, that he would come on that very day, and that he wouJ.d bring ten of the prin~ipnl chiefs of that island. I waited for ther;1 that whole day; but ns I saw that the poopl8 were niuch occupied in removing their possessions from their houses and carrying them to the Llountain, Gnd that during all this day and until noon of the next, Tupas, the son of Saripara, who killed the men of Magallanes, did not come, I sent a boat with father Fray Andres de Hurdanata and the master-of-camp, in order that, in thoir presence, the government notary, w~th Hieronimo Pacheco, interpre"cer of the Malay tongue ( which is spoken by many of the natives of this land), might request the natives, as vassals of the king of Castilla, to receive us peaceably. They were to assure the people that I did not come to do them any harm, but on the contrary to show them ovcry favor, and to cultivate their friendship. Three times this announceme ..1t was ma de to them, wi t11 all the signs and kind words possible to win their friendship. But at length -- seeing that all our good intentions viere of no avail, and that all the natives had put on their wooden corsclets and rope armo.,_· · and had armed themselves with their lances, shields, small cutlasses, and arrows; and that many plumes and varicolored headdresses were 1,1aving; and that help of men had. come in prau§. from the outside, so that their number must be alrr;ost two thousand warriors; and considering that now was the time for us to make a settlement and effect a colony, and that the present port and location were exactly suited to our needs~ and that it was useless for us to wait any longer; and seeing that there v1as no hope for peace, and that they did not wish it, although we -76had offered it - the master-of-camp said to the natives throup:h an interpreter: "Since you do not desire our friendship, and will not receive us peacefully, but are anxious for war, wait until we have landed; and look to it that you act as men, and defend yourselves from us, and guard your houses." The Indians ans1:ered boldly: 11 Be it col Come ont We await vou here." And thereupon they broke out into loud.cries, coverin~ themselves with their -shields and "'.:ira.ndishinr: their J.ances. 'fhen they returned to the place whence they had set out, hurling their lances by divisions of threes at the boat, and ret·J.rnin::~ c3.fain to their' station, going and coming as in a f3me of cafias.8 Our men got ready and left the ships in boats; and as the boats left the shipG for the shore, in accordance with the order given them, some shots were fired from the ships upon the rnul titude of Prc!l!_~ anchored near a promon-~ory, as 1,rnJ.l as at the landsmen upon shore, and upon the town. But, al r,hough they had showed so great a ·desire for war, when they heard the artillery and saw its effects, they abandoned their village without w.g_i_ting for 'oattJ.e, and fled through the large, beautiful, and fertilG open fields that are to be seen in this region. Accordin~ly we rerr1:1ined in the villare, vJhich hc.1.cl oeen lef-i.~ totallywithout provisions by the na·~;ives. We pursued the enemy, but they are the li~htest and swiftest runners whom I have ever seen. Hhen we entered the village, all the food had already been taken away. However, I believe t:i1at there will be no lack of food. In exchanqe for our hardshins this is a good prospect, allhough there is no.hope of food except th~ough our swords~ The land is thickly populated., and so fertile tbat fonr days after we ·too'.:: the villa_,1e the Castilian seods had already SprOU"CGd, T.Je have Seen SOlne li,_:;;t:,]_e gold here, on the ::z2.r1iients worn bv the natives. -:.Je are at the ,fAte a~-ic.l in the vicinity of the 111ost fortunate countries of the world, and the most remote; it is three hunc.rec.1 lea2:1.leS or thereaboul:.s farther t:1c.m gre?-_t c~1ina, Jti.rneJ:, Java, La-:J.zon, Sumatra, ~aluco, Halaca, Patan, jian, Lequios, Japan, and 8 - .An equestrian exercise with reed spears. Ibid. -77other rich arid large provinces. I hope that, through God's protection, there will be in these lands no slight result for his service and the increase of the royal crown, if this land is settled by Spaniards, as I beli~ve it will be, From this village of Cu'ou, I have despatched the ship with the fat her prior ( Urdaneta) and my grandson, Phel ip e de Za 1zedo, with a long relatiun of the things which I boldly write here to your e~cellency. They wiL'._ inforL1 his majesty at length, as persons who have been eyewitnesses of all, especially of what has taken place here, the state of t:ie new settlement, and the arrangements ma de for everything. It reraa ins to be said that, sine e this fleet was despatched by the most illustrious viceroy, my master, of 'blessed memory, and further, chiefly because of beinr~ an enterprise ti10.t every gentleman should all the more favor, inasuuch as it pertains naturally to your excellency, as the heir of the g:!_ory resulting from this expec.ition --- your excellency should favor it in such a manner that we may feel here the touch.of your most illustrious hand, ;.:md so tr.at aid should be sent as promptly as the necessity of our conc:it:I.on demands. Fo:c we shall have war not only witn ths natives of this and other neighboring isle.nds of the Philj_ppinas (which is of the lesser import), bu.t --- a thing of greater consequence -- we shall have to wage war with many different nations and islands, who will aid these people, and will sida against us. On seeing us settled in this island the Port"J.f_!;uese ·will not b~ pleased, nor will tho Eoros and other powerful and well-armed people. It mi:;ht happen the.t, if aid is delayed and is not .::;e:1t by you to us with e.11 promptitud13, the delay will prove a sufficient obstacle, so that no r·osul'.j 1;Jill follow from the work that we have a cconp1is~wc.. I beg his maj estv to send us some aid v·' it.11 the uromptne'ss, which rightly should not be 2-u::::s +;hem in that city of Espa:2ia, where his majesty rc.sid2s. And because it is worth knowing, and so tha~ your exw cellency may underatand that God, our Lord, has waited in this same place, and that he will be served, and that pending the beginning of the extension of his holv faith and mast glorious name, he has accomplished most miraculous 'things in this western region, your excellency, should know 1 -78that on the day when we entered this village, one of the soldiers went into a large and well--buil t house of an Indian, where he found an image of the child Jesus (vvhose most holy name I pray may be universally worshiped). This was kept in its cradle, all gilded, just as it was brought from Espafia; and only the little cross which is g£nerally placed upon the &;lobe in his hand was lacking. This image was 1Jell kept in that house, and many flowers were found before it, no one knows for what object of purpose. The soldier bowed before it with all reverence and wonder, and brought the image to the place where the other soldiers were; I pray the holy name of this image which we have found here, to help us and to grant us victory, in order that these lost people who are ignorant of the precious and rich treasure which was in their possession, may come to a knmvledge of him. -79CHAPTER FOUR EARLY FILIPINO CIVILIZATION The Filipinos whoriJ the Spaniards encountered in the Philippines were the direct descendants of the Malay immigrants who came to the Philippines from South and Southeast Asia in successive waves of migration centuries before the arr.i val of the I,!JaKellan expedition. In their new homes, the Philippine :Ula.lays set up their own forms of political and social organization, of which the unit and pattern was the balan~a-: or ~np;ay to use the Spanish transcription. Of the estimated population of 500,000 then occupying the Philippines, a considerable number were living in single parf.lngay.§_ consisting of from JO to 100 far,1ilies and ruled by datos or Il1cl.1?inoos. The rest were living in larger political units, larce con~mnities or confederacies of ba:i:_cgia:ay_s_, under _D;1.iahs, l).aris or sultans. The rulers governed their respective b~_r_~ngay§. or confederacies of ba_r.2,_IlE.§.Y§. in accordar1C e ·,dth established laws, customs and traditions. The people carried on trade among themselves and with their 01·ie:ntal 111:,izhbors. writing, consisting of syllabaries. They had systems of They had their own -80religious beliefs and practices,as well as their DWn standards of morality and their own sense of values. For the study of early Filipino civilization, the writings of four well-known authorities· will be used Antonio de Morga, Miruel de Loarca, Juan de Plasencia and Francisco Colin. Antonio de Morga was a high official in the Spanish government in the Philippines. royal Audiencia in Manila. He was a member of the At one time he served as acting governor of the Philippines, 1595-1596. He had during his residence in the Philippines (1595-1603) good opportunities for observing conditions in the Philippines and the ways of life of the Filipino people. The work which he wrote, under the title nsucesos de las Islas Filipinas 11 (Events in the Philippine Islands), is a narration of events in the Philippines from the first discoveries by Europeans in the East until his own title. It was published in He::::ico in 1609. Of particular interest to the student of early Filipino civilization is the eighth Ghapter of the Sue~, for this chapter contains Morga 1 s observations on various aspects of Filipino life. The following are portions of the eighth chapter -81of l'forga' s Sue eso s: 1 Geography of the Philippines The islands of the eastern Ocean Sea, adjacent to farther Asia, belonging to the crown of Espana, are generally called, by those who navigate thither by way of the demarcation of Castilla and Castilla' s seas and lands of America, "the Western Islands;" for from the time that one leaves Espana, he sails in the course of the sun from east to west, until he reaches them. For the same reason they are called "Eastern Islands" by those i'lho sail from west to east by way of Portuguese India, each of them circumscribing the world by voyaging in opposite directions, until they meet at these islands, which are numerous and of varying size; they are properly called Filipinas, and are subject to the crown of Castilla. They lie within the tropic of Cancer, and extend from twenty-four degrees north latitude to the equinoctial line, which cuts the islands of Moluco.2 There are many others on the other side of the line, in the tropic of Capricorn, which extend for twelve degrees in south latitude. The ancients affirEted that each and all of t~--iem were desert and uninhabitable, but now experience has demonstratec~ t:1at they deceived themselves; for good clirna,tes, many people, and food and other things necessary for human life are found there, besides many mines or rich metals, with precious gems and pearls, and animals and plants, which nature has not stinted. It is impossible to number all ~he islands counting larger and smaller - of this vast archi- ------1 - B. & R., vol. 16, PP• 69-133. _The full text in English of Morga' s §..1.J9J2_s_Qs de las Is_la~__lilip~nae, is in v0lumes 15 and 16 of the Pl1iliDPine Is1.§.lli!,s.,. Blair and Robertson have included in the:Lr edition the notes made by Rizal in his own edition of Morga (Paris, 1890), as well as those ta~en from Stanley's translation of korga (Hakluyt Sec. ed., London, H~68.) 2 - The present lirdts of the P~1ilippine Archipelago are as follows: 116° l~O' and 126° 34' east longitude, and 4° 40' and 21° 10' north latitude. 1 -82p elago. Those comprised in the name and government of Filipinas, number about forty large islands, besides other smal;J_er ones, all consecutive. The chief est and best known are Luzon, Mindor6, Tendaya f3 Capul, Burias, Masbate, l'iarinduque, Leiti, Camar, Ybabao, Sebu, Panay, Bohol, Catenduanes, Calarnianes, Mindanao, and others of less re~own. The first island conquered and colonized by the Spaniards was Sebu, From.there the conquest was started and continued in all the neighborin'.; islands. Those islands are inhabited by people, natives of the same islands, called Vicayas; or by another name, Pintados -- for the more prominent of the men, from their youth, tattoo their whole bodies, by pricking them wherever they ~re marked and then throwing certain black powders over the bleeding surface, the figures becoming indelible. But, as t}1e chief seat of the r;overnrnen-t, and the principal Spanish settlement, was moved to the isl,~nd. of Luzon -- the largest island, .and that one nearest and opposite to Great China and Jauon -- I shall treat of it first; for mucl:l that will be said. of it is similar 3 - It is very difficult now to determine exactly which is this island of Tenday1:i, c,·JlJ.ed Isla Filipina. for some years. AccordinJ to Father Urdaneta's relations, this island was far to the east of the group, past the meridian of lVIaluco. Mercator locates it in Panay, and Colin in Leyte, between Abuyog and Cabalian -- contrary to the opinj_on of others, who locate it in Ibabao, or south of Samar, But according to other documents of that per~od, there is no island by that name, but a chief called Tendaya, lord of a village situated in that district; and, a~ tho Spaniards did not understand the Indians well as that time, Llany contradictions thus arose in the !'elations of that period. We see that, in Legaspi' s expedition, whiJ.e the Spanicu'ds talked of islands, the Indians talked of a man, etc. After looking for Tendaya for ten days they had to cortimrn without finding it "and we passed on without seeing Tend.aya or Abuyo". It appears, nevertheless, that the Spaniards continued to give this name to the southwestern part of Samar, calling the southeastern part Ibabao or Zibabao and the northern part of the same island Samar.---Rizal. -8Jin the others, to each of whose particulars and distinctive details I shs.11 pass in due time. This island of Luzon extends lengthwise, from the point and head where one enters the Filipinas Islands (by the channel of Capul, which lies in thirteen and one-half degrees north latitude) to the other point in the province of Cagayan, called Cape Bojeadqr (and located opposite China, in twenty degrees), more than two hundred leguas. In so~e parts its width is @ore constricted than in ·others, especially in the middle of the island, .1here it is so narrow thnt it is less than thirty lefuas from sea to sea, or from one coast to the other, The whole island is more than four hundred leguas in circumference •••• 0 Inhabitants of the Philippines The people inhabiting the province of Camarines and almost as far as the provinces of Manila, in this great island of Luzon, both along the coast and in the interior, are natives of this island, They are of medium hei-;ht, with a complexion lilrn stewed quinces; and both men and women are well-featured. Xhey have very black hair, and thin beards; and are very clever at anything that they undertake, keen and passionate and of great resolution. All live from their labor and gains ::._n tl1e 1ie_Ld, L'.t1eir fistlin,~, ana trade, going f:.:,om isJ.crnd to island by sea, and from province to p~ovince by land. The natives oi the other provinces of this island as far as Cagayan are of the same nature and disposition, except that it has been learned by tra"".' dition that those of ~anila and its vicinity were not natives of this ]_and, but came thither in the past and colonized it; and that they are i~lay natives, and colilG from other islands and remote provinces .4, .. -·-----4 - The ancient traditions point to Sumatra as the ancestral home of the Filipinos. These traditions were completely lost, together with the mythology and the genea- -84The province of Cagayan is inhabited by ,.,natives of the sari1e complexion as the others or the island, although they are better built, and more va1 ia.nt and warl :.Llrn than the others. They wear their hair long and l:tan,£ine: down the back. They have been in revolt and rebellion twice eince the first time when they were pacified; and there has been plenty to do, on different occasions, in subduing them and repacifying them. The apparel and clotting of those natives of Luzon before the entrance of the Spaniards into the country were r:;:enerally, for the men, certain short collarless garments of ~ng:a.q, sewed togethe~ in the front, and with short sleeves, and reaching slightly below the waist; some were blue and others black, while the chiefs :C1ad some red ones, called: chinanas.5 They also wore a strip of colored cloth wrapped about the waist, and passed between the legs, so that it covered the privy parts, reaching half-way down the thigh; these are called b?-h.§..9Q.§.S. They sso with legs bare, feet unshed, and the head uncovered, wrapping a narrow cloth, called potong just below it, with which they bind the forehead and temples. About their necks they wear gold necklaces, wrought like spun ·wax, anc~ 11ith links in our fashion, some larger than others. On their arms they wear armlets of wrou_;ht gold, vfhich they called calombi.ga§., and which are very large and made in differont patterns. Some wear strings of logies referred to ~Y the old ci~roniclers, thanks to the zeal with which the rnissionar·ies destroyed everythi:n.g that reminded the Filipinos of their former pagan culture,., Rizal. 5 - Chinanas. ".Je do not know for certain the origin of this word. To us it rfoes not appear t:J be derived from China. I.f we are perPi:Ltted to of.fer a guess, we ·would say that it is derived from tinina (from tina) which in Tagalog means colored dress a!1d th3t-;--·throughan error in phonetical tran5cription, the word was transformed into chinina. The chiefs were in the h3iJit of wearing red-colore-d dr~sses, made, according to Colin, fi~on-i 11 fine Indian gauzen. This partiality towards the red color, which' we find among the i ancient Romans, still exists among the pagan tribes of Min-~ i danao.--Rizal. 'I, -85precious stones -- cornelians and agates; and other blue and white stones, which they esteem highly. They wear around the legs some strings of theso stones, and certain cords_, covered with black pitch in many fol~ings, as garters. In a province called Zamb&les, they wear the head shaved from the middle forward, On the skull tney have a hugh lock of loose hair.6 'I'he women throughout tl1is island wear small ja. ckets ( sayuelos) with sleeves of the same kinds of cloth and of all colors, called .Y.§.129.£• They wear no shifts, but certain white cotton garments which are wrapped about the waist and fall to the feet, while otber dyed clothes are wrapped about the body, 1 ike kirtl es, and are very graceful. The principal women have crimson ones, and some of silk, while others are woven with gold 1 and adorned with fringe and 9ther ornnments. They wear many .::old necklaces about the neck, caJ.umbigas on the wrists, large earrings of wrought gold in the ears, and rin8;s of gold and precious stones. The black hair is done up in a very gracefbl knot on the head. Since the Spaniards came to the country many Indians do not wear bahaw1es, but wide drawers of the same cloth and materials, and hats on their heads. The chiefs W8ar braids of wrought gold containing ruany designs, while many of them wear shoes. The chief women also wear ~eautiful shoes, many of them havins shoes or velvet adorned with gold, and white garments like petticoats. Men and won:.en, and especially the chief peo ple, are very clean and neat in their persons and clothing, and of pleasing address and grace. They dress their hair caTefully, and regard it as being more ornamental when it is very black, They wash it with vrnter in which has been boiled the bark of a tree called .2:.orz:o. They anoint it with aljonjoli oil, preparecr~iith musk, and other perfumes. All are very careful of their teeth, which from D. very early age they file and render even, with ----·---·6 - This manner of headdress and the long robe of the Visayans have an analogy with Japanese coiffure and kimono.-Ri:ml. -86stones and iron. They dye them a black color, which is lasting, and which preserves their teeth until they are very old, although it is ugly to look at. • •• Both men and women, especially the chief, walk slowly and sedately when upon their visits, and when going through the streets and to the temples; and are accompani(~d by many slaves, both male and female, with parasols of silk which they carry to protect them from the sun and rain, The women walk ahead and their female servants and slavc~s follow them; behind these walk their husbands, fathers, or brothers, with their man-servants and slaves. Their ordinary food is rice pounded in wooden mortars, and cooked -- thi.s is called moriso1_J3_t.s1, and is the ordinary bread of the whole country -boiled fish (which is very abundant), the flesh of swine, deer, and wild buffaloes (which they call carabaos). • •• They also eat boiled camotes (which are sweet potatoes), beans, .921il_ite,2., and other vegetables; all kinds of bananas, guavas, pineapples, custard . i::.ies . ' l • app __] es, many varie o.L.c, orang cs, an d o-c.1er varieties o.f fruits 8.nd herbs, with which the country teems. 'i'heir drin~c is a wine made from the tops of cocoa and nipa palm, of which there is a great abundance. They are grown and tended like vineyards, although without so ruuch toil and labor. Drawing off the tl!,_ba, they distil it, using for alembics their own little furnaces and utensils, to a greater or less strength, and it becones brandy. This is drunk throug:h the islands. It is a wine of the clarity of water, but strong and dry. If it be used with moderation, it acts as a medicine for the stomach, and is a protection against humors and all sorts of rheuir,s. I'Iixed with Spanish wine, it makes a mild liouor, and one very palatable and healthful. ••• · Ships and Boats Their ships and boats are of many kinds; for on the rivers Jnd creeks inland they use certain -87very large canoes, ea.eh made from one log, and others fitted with benches, and made from planks, and built up on keels, They have vireys and barangays, \,vhich are certain quick and light vessels that lie low in the water, put together with little wooden nails. These are as slender at the stern as at the ·oo\·J, and they can hold a number of rowers on both sides, who propel their vessels with b_µcce:y_e§_ or paddles, and with z..:,ciones on the outside of the vessel; and they tiue tlwir rowing to the accompaniment of some who sing in their language refrains by which they understand whether to hasten or retard their rowing. A:Jove the rowers is a ulatform or gangway, built of bamboo, upon which the~ fightingmen stand, in order not to interfere with the rowing of the oarsmen. In accordance with the capacity of the vessels is the number of men on these gangways. From that place they manage the sail, which is square and made of linen, and hoisted. on a support or yard made of two thick bamboos, which serves as a mast, When the vessel ts large, it also has a foresail of the same form. Both yards, with their tackle, can be lowered upon the gangway when the weather is rough. The helmsman are stationed in the stern to steer. It carries another bmnboo framework on the gan<sway itself; and upon this, when the sun shines hot, or ,it rains, they stretch an awning riiade from some mats, vmven from palm-1 eaves • T1J.es e are very bulky and cJ_os e, and are called .£_~Z.filliL8-• Thus all the ship and its crew are covered and protected. There are also other banilioo frameworks for each side of the vessel, which are so long as the vessel, and securely fastened on. They skim the water, withont hindering the ro,winf, and serve as a count errJo ise, so that the ship cannot overturn nor upset, however heavy the sea, or strong the wind against the sail. It may happen that the entire hull of these vessels, which have no decks, may fill with water and remain between wind and water, even until it is destroyed and broken up, without sinking, because of these counterpoises. These vessels have been used commonly throughout the islands since olden times. They have other larger vessels called caracons, lapis, and ta:12.§.92::!_e_~, which are used to carry their merchandise, and which are very suitable, as they are roomy and draw but little water. They -88generally drag them ashore every nigh~, at the mouths of rivers and creeks, among which they always navigate without r~oing · into the open sea or leaving the shore. All the natives can row and manage these boats. Some are so long that they can carry one hundred rowers on a side and thirty soldiers above to fight. 'rhe boats commonly used are barangays and vireys, which c2rry a less crew and fighting force. Now they put many of them together with iron nails instead of the wooden pegs and the joints in ihe planks, while the helms and bows have beaks like Castilian boats •••• Natural Resources All these islands are, in many districts, rich in placers and mines of gold, a metal which the natives dig and ~ork. However, since the advent of the Spaniards in the land, the natives proceed more slowly in this, and content themselves with what they already possess in jewels and gold ingots, handed down from antiouity and inherited from their ancestors. 7 ':iihis is considerable, for he must be poor and vvretched who has no gold chains, calornbigas (bracelets), and earrings. Some placers and mines are worked at Paraceli in the province of Camarines, where there is a good gold mi;rnd with copper. This commidity is also .traded in the YJ.ocos, .for at the rear of this province, which borders the seacoast, are certain lofty and rug~ed mountains which extend as far as Cagayan. -·-~--~·--7 - The Indians ' upon seeing that their wealth aroused the rapacity of the encomenderos and soldiers, abandoned the working of the mines, and the friar historians state that, to free them from their vexations, they urged the Indians to proceed in that manner. However, Colin states that, from reliable sources, tho Islands produced in his time 100,000 ~esos 1-vorth of gold a year, after eight years of neglect and abandonment. - According to a private manuscript, the first tribute from the provinces of Ilocos and Pangasinan alone amounted to 109,500 pesos. An encomendero in 1587 sent to Manila in the gnlleon Santa Ana, which Cavendish later captured,3000 tons of gold.--Rizal. -89On the slopes of those mountains, in the interior, live many natives, as yet unsubdued, and among whom no incursion has been made, wno are called Ygolotes. These natives possess rich mines, many of gold e.nd silver mixed. They are wont to dig from them only the amo 1.,mt necessary for their ·want,s. 'l'hey descend to certain places to trade this ~old (without completing its refining or prepc:1ration), with the Ylocos; there they exchan§':f) it for rice, swine, carabaos, cloth and other things they need. The Ylocos complete its refining and preparation, and by their m.adium it is distributed throughout the coun1:,ry. Although an effort has been ma-tie with these Ygolotes to discover their mines, and how they work them, and their method of working the metal, nothing definite has becm learned, for the Ygolotes fear that the Spaniards will co to seek them for their gold, ~nd say that they ~eep the gold bet-ter in the earth tnan in their houses. There are .also many e;old mines and placers in the other isl.:,:110.s, especially among the Pintados, on the Botuan River in Mindanao, and in Sebu, where a mine of 3old is worked, called Taribon. If the industry and efforts of the Spaniards were to be converted into the working of the gold, ns much would be obtained from any one of these islands as from those provinces which produce the most in the world. But since thev attend to other means of gain rather than to this, as will be told in due time, they do not pay the proper attention to this matter. · In some of these islands pearl oysters are found, especially in the Cala~ianes, where some have been obtained that are large and exceedingly clear and lustrous.' Neither i; t~is means of profit utilized. In all parts 1 seed pea~~'1f:: are found in the ordinary oysters, and tre:c0 ere oysters as large as a buckler. From the (shells of the) latter ~the natives rnanufactur,~ beautiful articles. There are also very lar~e sea turtles in all the islands. Their shells are utilized by the natives, nnd sold as an article of commerce to the Chinese and Portuguese, and other nations who go after them and este8m them highly, because of the beautiful things ma.de from them. -90On the coasts of any of these islands are found many small white snail shells, called siguei. The natives gather them and sell them by measure to the Siamese, Cambodians, Pantanes, and other peoples of the mainland. It serves there as money, and those nations trade with it, as they do with cacaobeans, in Nueva Espana. Carabao horns are used as merchandise in trading with China; and deerskins and dye-wood with Japon. The nati7es make use of e·1erything in trading with those nat,j_ons and derive much profit therefron:. • •• In this island of Luzon, especially in the provinces of.Manila, Panpanga,. Partgasinan, and nocos, ce:ctain eart:1enware jars ( tibores) are found among the natives. They are very old, of a brownish color, and not handsorue. Some are of medium size, and others are smaller, and they have certain marks and stamps. The natives are unable to give any explanation of where o~ when they got them, for now they are not brought to the islands or made there. The Japanese see~ them and esteem them, for they have found that the root of a plant calJ_ed £l1c1 (tea) which is drunk hot, as a great refres1.1ment and medicine, among the kings and lords of Japon - is preserved and keeps only in these tibo~s. These are so highly valued throughout Japon, that they are regarded as the most ~recious jewels of their closets and hou.s ehold furniture. A tibor is North a great sue, and the Japanese adorn them outside with fine gold beautifully chased, aEd keep them :Ln brocade cases. Some tibors are valued and sold for two thousand taes of eleven reals to the tae-, or for less, according to the qualit:r of the tii)Or. It makes no difference if they are crac:~ed or c:1ipped, for that does not hinder them :'rom holding the tea. The natives of these islands sell tbs~ co the Japanese for tho best price pos~i~le, and oeek them carefully for this pro.f.'it. Lfowevei,, :£'ff\'! are found now,. because of the assictuity witn whicb. the natives have applied themselves to that search.8 8 - Dr. Jagor in n~s faoous work Reisen in den PhilipE.:i!l§g (Berlin, 1873}, discusses in chap:z,;·rXV-these-Jars, describing some of t:;hem, giving very curious and inte;r-esting -91Cotton is raised abundantly throu.:hout the islands. It is spun and sold in the ckein to the Chinese and other nations, who come to get it. Cloth of different patterns is also woven frorn it, and the natives also trade that. Other clothes, called medrinaques, are woven ~rem the banana leaf. The islands of H&buyt:mes consist of many small l • .-.r, ·c.'1e ' ' • ..,_ying o:i:1 up:?er coas.,+ o:i. t h.e province of Cagayai1. T~wy arc inhabited by natives, whose chief industry consists in going to Cagayan in their tapaques, with swtne, fowls, and other food, and ebony spears, :L'or cxch.am~e. The islands are not ass iEr...ed as oncomieno.ns, nor is any tribute collected from them. 'l'hcre are no Spaniards among the-,m, as those natives arc of less understanc.ing and less civilized (than the others).. Accordingly no Christians have been made arrong them, and they have no justices. • 1 an d s is C" Other islar..ds, called the Catenduanes, lie off the other head of thG island of Luzo~, oppositG the province of Camal'ines, in fourteen degrees of north latitude, near the strait of Espiritu Santo. They are islands de.nsely populated with natives of good disposition, who are all assigned to Spaniards. They posess instruction and churches, and have an alcaldemayor who ad.rnin:l.sters justice to them. IV'i.Ost o.f -::.hem cultivate the soil, but some are ~n_ga.::;ed ir: goldwashing, and in trading between various islands, and with the mainland of Luzon, very near those islands. .. ,. det.::iils about their history, form, and. val uo, some of which are highly priced, like those of the Sultan of Brunei who turned down an offer of 100,000.dollars for one of them. Dr~ Jagor himsolf, while in the Philippines, was able to get one, .found in an excavi.:l.tion r.:ad·3 in Li:;mana~1, Camarines Sur, in 1$51, together wit~ oth3r prehistoric artifacts belonging to the bronze a 6 es, as evidenced by the knives n~de from this metal, and the absence of articles of iron, ate. It is a pity that these objects were not better studied. Studying these precious jars from Cambodia? Siam, Cochi:r;icbina, Philippine:,s and other ncighboring islands, and det0~r·mining th2 time of thoir manufacture in the remot0 past, and their form, structure, seals, and inscriptions, we would perhaps find a clue to the problem of the common cultural ori 1~in of th0se nations .--Rizal -92The Pintados (Bisayans) South of this district, lie the islands of Bicayas, or as tlky c1re also called, Pintados. They arc many in numb or, i~hickly populated '\idth natives •. ThosG of most renown nrc0 Leito, Yoabao, Cama1" (Samar), Bohol, island of Negros, Sebu, Panay Cuyo, and the Calamianes. All the nativos of ttese islands, both. r,1on and vJoniun, are wclJ. -feat.ure;d, of a good dir.-;position, mid of better nature,. and more noble in their actions than the inhabitants of the islands of Luzon and its vicinity. 'rhey cliff er from them in their hair, which tho men wear cut in a cue, like th1J ancient stylo in Espafia. Their bodies are tattoed with many designs, but the face is not touphed. They woar l&rge aarrir1gs of vold and ivc:,ry i11 their ears, and bracelets of tho s~me; cortain scarfs wrnpp0d round the head, very showy, which r0semble turbcms, and kriotted very gracefully and e:;dged with u;old. Thoy\ wear also a loose collarless j3.cket t;ith tight sleeves, whose skirts roach half way down trw l01I• These gri.rments are fastenod in front and arc rno.de of rnedrinaque and colorcd silks. They trnar no shirts or draw0rs, but bahaques (i,0,, br0uch-cloutD) of many wroppin3s, which cover their privy partc, when thoy remove thuir r.e1::irts 2nd jackets. 'I'ho women ar(3 good-lool<ing anc;_ e;raccful. Ti.wy arc very neat, and wall-: sl.owly. Their hair is black, long, and dr:1wn into n knot on the hoad. Thoir robes are wropped about the v1aist and fall downward. Those c:tro rrnds of all colors, and they w0ar collarl0ss jackets of tl1tJ s':{,,Ki material. Both rnen and wornen go naked and wit!mut any coverin~s, and barefoot~ and with meny gold chains, earrings, and 1·Jrought bracelets •• , .. The island of Sebu is an islRnd of morG than one hundred lcguas in c ircu11L:cr2nce. It has abundance of provisions, and gold ~ines and placers, and is inhabited by natives .. Beyond it lie othar islands, very pleasant and well populat0d, ospecio.lly the island of Panay. Panay is a large islEmd, Lor0 tha::i ono hundred leguas in circumference, containing mnny nativG settle- -93ments. It produces considerable quantities of rice, palm-wino, and all manner of provisions. It has flourishing and wealthy settlements, on what is called the river of Panay. The chief one is Oton, which has a bar and port for ealley§ and ships, shipyards for buildir:.c; large slli:os, and a great amount of timber fo1 their construction. There are many natives, vJho aro n:asters of all l:inds of shipbuildings. Near this isla11d lies an islet eight leguas in circumfernnce, which is densely populated by natives who are all carpenters. 1 hey are excellent workrnen, and prcJ.ctice no other trade or occupation; and, without a single tree of any size on this whole islet, they practice this art with great ability. From there all the islands are f\l..tmishud. vl/ith wor!nirnn for carpentry. The island is called that of the Cagayanes. 1 1 After the island of Sebu follow immediately the isl::.md of Mindanao, 3.n island of' more than threo hundred leguas :.i.n circumferance, and Jolo, which is small. Lower down is the island of Borneo, a very large island, more than five hundred le,i:;u.-:i.s in circumference. All of t:b.ese isl-'lnds are denf:.wly populated, al though that of Borneo is not subdued. Nc::ithur is that of :fv'T.J.ndan2.o in entirety, but only thra river of Botuan, Dapitan, and the Province and coast of Car:1.go.n. Below this island (Mindanao), bc)fore reaching that of Born~o, lie the islands of the Calamianes. They are very numQrous, Dnd consist of isl2nds of various sizes, which are densely inhabit.·:)d, with natives; they havo some supp1y of provisio21s and engage in cnrta.in kinds of husbandry. However the most usual occupation is that of their navigations from island to island in pursuit of thei.r trading and exchange, and their fisheries; while tlmse who live nearest the isl2.nd of Borr:eo are wont to go on pir::i.tical raids and pillage the natives in other islands. • •• Systems of Writing The lan:;u,2.ge of all the Pintados and Bicayas is ono and the same, by which they understand one another when talkj_n;;, 'or whEm writing with the letters -91+and characters of their own which they possess. These resemble those of the Arabs. The comrr.on manner of writinr,: c1.r;1onri: the natives is on leaves of trees, nnd on -bamboo bark. Throughout the islands the bamboo is abundant; it has huge and misshapen joints, and lower part i~ a very thick and solid tree. The law·:ua?:c of Luzon ond those islands in its vicinity differ; ~idely from that of the Bicayas, The language of the is1,:md of Luzon j_s not uniform, for the Cagayans lE,ve ono language and the Ylocos another, The Zc11:1b2l c:s have their own particular language, while the Parnpango1J also have one different frorn the others. The inhabitants of the province of :Manila, the Tagals, heve their own lunguage, which is very rich and copious. By moans of it one can express elegantly 1.Jh:i.chever he wishes, .and in many modes and nianners. It is not difficult, either to learn or to pronounce, 1 The natives throughout the islands can write excellently with certain characters, almost like the Greek or Arabic. These chnracters are fifteen in all.. Three are vowels, which are used as our five. The consonnnts number twelve, and each and all of them combine with certain dotG-or corrmms, c1.nd so signify whatever one wishes to write, as fluently and easily as is done with our Spanish alphabet. The method of writing was on bamboo, but is now on paper, cornmencins; the 1 ines at the ri,i;ht and running to the left, in the Arabic fashion,9 Almost all the natives, both men and women, write in this lan- 9 - The quesT,ion of tl:ie direction followed by the ancient Filipinos in their writin~s has given riso to varied opinions nnd theorie:::i among scholars. Chirino, San Antonio, Zuniga and Le Seutil sa::,· thot it was vE.1rtical, from the top to the bottom. Colin, Esguerra and Mo.rche believe that it was vertical but in the opposite direction, from the bottom upwards. PC::ldro I/fr:ircilla and. Sinibaldo de Mas, on the other hand, assert thBt it was horizontal, from left to right, Dr. Ri znl in his edition o.f Morga' s Sue eso s sets forth his view on the same subjoct as follows: -95guage, There are very few who do not write it excellently and correctly. This lane;uage of the province of Manila, (i.e., the Tagal extends throughout the province of Camarines, and other islands not contiguous to Luzon. "What would seem the logical deduction is th~t they wrote in both ways, vertically and horizontally; vertically in the primitive epoch when they had to write on pieces of bamboo and palm leaves as this was the easier way, and horizontally when the use of paper became general. At any rate, the form of the characters was such that it could be written in these different directions. n ( Quoted by Villamar in his k{Ll,ntigua .E 2 critara Filip in?.,, p ~ 39, Manila, 1922), Dr, T, H. Pardo de Tcrve:ra in his Contribuc ion· para el §ill!,udio de los antiguos ulfabetos fj_lipinos (Lozana, 1884), after swnrnari zin~ th0 opinions of the various authorities, stated his own view as follows: · In view of the opinions cited, it appeo.rs cert.nin that the Filipino system of writing passed through three stages of devolopment: 1st. The anci.ent Filipinos wrote their language in ·their own characters, and that the 4irection in which these characters were written was olso their own. 2nd, These languages, without giving up their characters, abandoned the old direction and adopted a new one from the Spaniards. Jrd. The characte:cs, in turn, were abandoned and the Latin alphabet was adopted. This conclusion which,at first siJht, appears logical and certain is nevertheless far from the truth. The first and the third only should be o.ccepted for the second stage never took place e:::cept in the imae;ination. Dr. Tavera then went on to state that the languages in :Malaysia whose alphabets were similar to the ancient Fi1:Lpino nlphabets were written in a horizontal direction, -96There is but little difference in that spoken in the various dist:ric:.:.s, except that it is spoken more elegantly in some provinces than in others •••• H o u s e s The houses and dwellings of all these natives are univer,sallv set upon stc:lkes and arigu§.§.. (i,e., columns) high above the ground, Their rooms are small and the roofs low. - They are built and tiJ.ed with wood and bamboos, and covered and roofed 'ivith nipa-palm leavGs. Each house is separate, and is not built adjoining another. In the lower part are enclosures made by stakes and bamboos, 1;,1her e their fowls and cattlos aro rea~ed, and the rice pounded and cleaned. One ascends into the houses by means of ladders that co.n be drawn up, which are made from two barnboQs, Above are their open batalo.nes (galeries) used for hou.s ehold duties; the par,:mts and ( o.:rown) children 1 iv c to eether, Th.ere is little aJornment and finery in €he houses, which are calla~ b§.handin, ---------· from left to the ri;~ht, a direction common to all thB systems of writing of 1Iindu orie;in, and that it was probable that this was the primit:i.ve a11d only way in which the Filipinos wrote their characters. Justice Ignacio Villamar in a pamphlet wh:i.ch he wrote under the title La Aqt_i.z.µJ}, Escritura E,ilipina, {JVIanila, 1922), arrived nt the same conclusion that was reached by Dr. Ta~era. Justice Villamar used as a basis for his study several ancient Filipino raanuscripts1 particularly an old Philippine edition of the Belarmino, which presented texts of the Christian doctrine in the old Filipino characters. His basic conclusion after a careful study of these documents was stat,ed by him in these words: ••• from what appears in the Belarr(lin_Q. and the documents and signatures herd.n r oproduced, all dating prior to the year 1636, we venture to conclude that the ancient FiliI?inos wrote in a horizontal directiQn, fror1( left to right, Just as we do now. -97Besides these hou.::;e~,, which are those of the common people anc"'. t,'.-tose of less importance, there are the chiefs' houses. They are built upon trees and thick aricues, with many rooms nnd cot~orts. They a r(-'.l -well const:cuct ed of timber and ::1lanl~s, and are stronr: und la r/e. They are :furnishGd and supplied with al1 that is necess,117, and are muc11 finer and more sub stnntial th,:m tb.ci other;c:. They arc roof eel, ~1owever, <1s .:::ire the otlF:rs, w:Lth tl1e palm-leaves culled nipa. Those keep o~t the woter and the .sum mo:ce than do .shinc1;J.es or tilos, althouzh the dan~or from fires is greater. The natives do not inhabit the lower part of their houses, bec~:use they raise their fowls and cattle there, and bocauf-3G of the damp and heat of the earth, an.:l the H9_ny r.:.its, 1:Jhich are enormous and destructive ·toth in the houses and sowed fields; and because, as their houses are eonerally built on sea shore, or on i~Le 1xrnks of rivers and creeks, the waters baths the lower parts, and the latter are consequently left open. · Go Y e r n me n t There V\l•c:Pe no !-,~inr.i:21 or lords throuri:hout tb.ese islands 1~ho r~_.lJ.ect over Ehcm ~rn in the mariner of our kingdoms and proviuces; but in every islund and in each province cf it, many chiGfs were recognized by th,3 natives thcmsel vE:s. Some -vrnr 2 more powerful than others, t:110 et-lcrl ont=1 had his follo-uers and subjocts, by districts and fnmilies; and those obeyed and respectc~d the chirif. SJmc c:.1icis had friendship and co1i1munication w::i.tb others, Dlld. ut~ ti;-.1e .s wars and quarr8ls. /" 1-·l-_ , .,p.1.--~-:.LPC..1...po.:,.,_1 ~- -,1 ··t.J.c.~ ".., anl . l l .o,.y,Jc·,.,1,_, 1·nTl1ose ..:_Js' it.·•ere •vi _ hcrited in the malo lino and by succeEsion of fnther a11d son c:1r.d their dPsc<:1ndunts. I:f these ,1crc lclck- ine, thon their brothers and collateral relatives succeeded. Their duty was to rule and govern their subjects and foJ.lm-1ers, c:md t.o assist thertr in their interests .smd nece:Js5.ties. What tte chiefs received froL: c:wir f'ollm-Jers was to be held by them in great veneration und rospect; and they werG served . tl . ·cJ._ ' · 11.ing, sowin t1:e1r wars ;-~nc, voya7,eo, 311 d· J.n - ·1c1r • 1,., • ' -98ing, fishing, and the buildin~ of their houses. To these duties the natives attended very proli1ptly, whenever summoned by their chief. They olso pnid the chie.fi:., tribute ( which they call eel b~i:,.,), in var rin'.?: quantities in t.he crops that ti.-i:ey gathered. TheJde~cendants of'such chiefs, and their rel~tives, evAn though they did not inherit the lordship, were held in t1e same respect and consideration. Such WE!re all regardec~ ::s nobles, and as persons exempt from the services r8ndered by the others, or the plebians, who were called tima_r:uas. The same right of nobility and chieftainship was preser7ed for the women, just ns for the men. \'Jhen any of these chiefs ',vas mol'e couY.'a,<:<:eous than others in war c.nd upon othAr occasions,-such a one enjoyed nIDre followers and men; 3nd the others werG under his leadership, even if they w0re chiefs. These latter re~ tained to theE1scl vcs the lordsl1ip nnd po.rticular government of their own following, which is called barangai amon,-,; them, They had datos and other special leaders (mandadores) who attended to the intercs-ts of thobarangay. • •• 1 When soue natives had suits or disputes with others over matters of property and int crest, or over personal injuries and wrongs received, thoy appointed old ;non of the same district, to try them, t~e parties boing present. If they had to present proofs, they 1:irou~:-it th2ir witnesses t~1ere, and the case was inmeJiately judged accordi1€ to what was found, et ccord.ir:g to the usag ,c:;s of tho ir ancestors on like occasions; and that sentence was observed and executed ·without any further oiJj ect:l.on or delay. The nat i vcs' laws tl:irou;~hout the isJ.ands were made in the same rnmmer, and tlioy .:ollo,:wd the traditions and customs of their ancestors, without anything bein~ written. Some provinces had different customs than others in some respects, However, they agreed in @ost, and in all the islands generally the same usages were followed,1O 19 - T~is fundnDe}~Rl a~r8ement of laws, and this ~eneral uniformity, prove ~Dot tne mutual rolutions of the islands were widesproad, anc1 the bonds of friendship more frequent than were wars and quarrels. There may-have existed -99Social CJ.asses There ar,2 thr2e conditions of persoJ.1s aniong ,the nativus of tl1E.~s0 :Lslancls, and into which tlieir government is divideJ; the chiofs, of whom we have alrGady troate,~; "t,he ti:1mr;uas, who are equ:..valent to plebeians; and slaves, those of Loth chiefs and tirnaguc1 s. The slaves vrnre of .sever.11 classes. ;Soi11G were for all kinds 1 of wor~-: and sJ.avc:1ry, lil:e those which we ourselves l-iol d. E.>uc h nre c;illed gg_uig_uil5J.:§S; they served inside the house, as did like~ise the children born of thou, There are others who live in their own housos with their families, outside the house of their lord; and come, at the se~son, to aid him in his sowings and harvests, among his roAer·s when he embarks, in the construction of his house when it is being built, and to serve in his hou.SE) when there are guests of distinction. · These .::,.re '.Jound to come to their lord's house whenever be suLn:1.011:':1 them, and to serve i~ t.hese oifices without any pay er stipend. Thes<:i slaves are co.l.led pamamahays, Rnd :.:,heir cL.ildren and descendanto are slaves of the saMe cl2ss. From these slaves- Qpgg~JJ)._irE~. and Q§.J:SlI.!][:l-iay'?. - .::ir~~ issue, some of whom are w11ole slaves, som,J of :iiom CLr2 Lalf slaves, ~nd still others one-fourth slavos, It happens thus: if either the father or the mother was freo, and they had an only child, he was half free and half slo.ve. If tiwy had more than one ch.ild, ·~hey were divided as follows: the first follows the condition of the .f,q:thcr, freG or slave; the s1cicond that of the rnothor. If thero were a::1 odd numb er of childr,3n, the last was :-1,1lf f rce ~:i.nd half slave. ':Chose 'iJho descended from these, if c~ildren of a free Mo~her or father, were only one·<'ourth slaves, becau:3o of ~-1eini; children of a free father or mother and of a halfslave, These half slaves or one-fourth slaves, whether sagn~i1.:i::t'..2. or !:!,_qlM\~~-h§_,,CQ, se;_-·vcd thei.r mo.stGrs during every other rIDon; and iD this respect so is such condition slavery. a confoderation, since we know from tho first Spaniards that tl1e chief of r,:aniln was cornmonder-in-chief of' the sultan of Borneo. In addi t :Lon, docum811ts of the twelfth century that exist testify the same t}dng. ---Rizal. -100In the snme way, it may happen in divisions between heirs that n slave will fall to several, and serves each one for the time that is due him, When the slave is not wholly slave, but half or fourth, he has the right, because of that part that is free, to compel his ma.ster to emancipate him for a just price. This price is appraised and resuldted for persons accordin~ to the quality of their slavery, whether it be sE1p:uigu:i.lir ·or no.mamahr1.y, half slave or quarter slave. But, if he is wholiy slave? the mast rn~ cannot :J e compc3ll ed to ransom or emancipate him for any price. ; The usual price) of et sag'..liguilir slave among the native~ is, at most? grme~ally ten tD.os of good gold, or eighty pesos; if he is namamahay, half of that sum. The others are in tho same proportion, taking into consideration the person and his age. l\T 1~0 1, • d b- eginning • • • , as t'ne ori• ·· ixe can b e assignea gin of these kinds of slavery nmong these natives, bec~use all the slaves are natives of the islands, and not strangers. It is thought that they were made in their wars and quarrels. Thu most certain knowledge is that the most powerful made the others slave and seized then for slir:ht cause or occasion, and many times for loans [ind w:1urious contracts which were current nmong them. The interest, capitc=:l, nnd debt, increa:3ed so much 1,1ith delay that the borrowers become slaves. Consequently all these slaveries have violent and unj:.1st 'o3ginnings; and rno3t of the suits among the n:.1tives cire over these, and they occupy the judges in th2 exterior court with them, and their confes~ors in that of conscience. These slaves11 comprise the greatest wealth and capital of the natives of these islands, for they 11 - The condition of slaves wns not always a melancholy one. Argensola says that they ate at the same table vvith their masters, a.ncl married into their familie:=;. The histories fail to record the assassination for motives of v~ngeance of any master or chief by the natives, n::1 they do 01 encomenderos. After the conquest the evil deepened. The Spaniards made slaves vdthout these p1·etexts, ,imd with- -101- are very useful to them and necessary for the cultivation of their property. Thei are sold, traded, and exchanged alilonz thorn, jm,t ns any other n:ercantil e· article, f:corn ono villagu to another, from one province to another, nnd likewise from one islanJ to another. Therefore, and to avoid so many suits as would occur if theso slaveries were oxanined, and their ori~in and source ascertained, they are preserved and held :u:; tl1eJ were formerly • .Marriage Customs The rnarrL:i.ces of these natives, commonly and generally were, and are: Chlefs with women chiefJ; timaguas wi~h those of that rank; and sluves with those of their own class. But sometimes theti8 classes intermarry with one another. They considered one woman, w~om t~~Y marr.ied! as. t~_e l~riti~r1c:1te _·:Jife '.9.n~ ~ t}'ie 12 rnJ.stref::~ of the house i and t,he was styled _y_11.,:i..:iBO..i,1, 'l'hose whom they kept besidos her they considered as frienda. The children of the first were regarded as legitimate and whole heirs of thoir parents; the children of the others woro not so rogard0d, and were le.ft_ something by assignment, but they did not inherit. The dowry 111as furnishf:;c.1 by the man, . :-; "<i.~'.'~' i?:i ven by his parents. The wife furni.shod notbJ.n : 1 or thB marricige, until she had inherited it from hvr par- out thoso enslaved boin~ Indians of their jurisdiction going moreover, to take-them away from their own villages and islands. Fer·nando do los Rios Cororn~l, in his rnemorL-:11 to the king ( Mctclricl, 1621) pp. 24-25, specdcs in scathin.r: terms of tlrn crueltie.s inflicted on the natives in tlrn construction oi.' ships du:cing t.ht) governorship of Juan de Silva. A lott1r lrom Felipa II to Bishop Domingo de Salaz3r shovrn the avdul tyranny excrci::;(:jc1 by the encomondi::T·o,s upon the nr'.L-i.ve:=;, whose condition was worso than that of slaves.--Rizal. 12 - Inasawa_, or :;;ore correctly usq:-~q Rizo.l. (consort.) ... -102- cnts_ 1 3 The solemnity of the marriage consisted in nothin12: more than the agreement between the parents and relatives of the contracting parties' the payment of the dowry agreed upon to the father of the bride, and the assembling at the wife~ s pare1:its' house of all the relatives, to eat ·and drink unt1.l they would fall d01rm. At night the man tool: the woman to his house and into his power, and there she remained. These rinrriay,es were annuled and dissolved for slight cause, - with tl°ie exam~nation .an~ juds;ment of the relatives of both parties, ano. 0I the old men, who acted as mediators in tho aff~irs. At such a time the man took tho dO\~ry {which they call vigadicaya), unless it happened that they separated through the husband's fault; for then it ·.vas not returned to him, and the wife's p.J.rents kept it. 'l'he property that they had acquj_red together was divided into halves, and each one disposed of his own. If one made any profits in which the other clid not have a share or participa-t.G, he acquired it for himself alone. 13 - This continued the union between parents and children, which "'1as a 1,Jiser arrangement than what is found in many parts of Europe where cases ars known of sons neglecting their parents once they have obtained their inheritance and of pGrents not allowing their sons to marry so as not to lose control of their resources •••• We say that thi.s arran.&>:ement continued the union nnd ncit ·::,he affection which- is tal:en for grantectEUia'.-which in many cases amounted to veneration. While. the f'c::thor or the mother was living, the home continued to exist even if all the children were already married and lived independently. Naturally, the daughter did not have to bring any dowry. The qualities of the Filipino wom2in, a person who was a help rather than a burden to the husb:i.nd, would reject such a practice which is nec,~ssary to .::1 European who generally is 3.n additional char:::;e, or burden upon the man I s budget• In the Phil ipi) ines, the W')l11an docs not go out to fish for, but to ch'.3ofrn, a husb:mtl.. And the husbsnd does not take on the heuvv burden 01, the zoke of matrimony, but a companion who is to help and to introduce. economy in the disord0red life ocf the young man. --Rizal~ -103- Status of Children - Inheritance The India1w were adopted onE-:i by another, in presonce of the rel,JtivtJS, Tho adopted. }Je1·son gD.ve and uelivorcd all his D ctunl possessions to chc one who adopted hin1. Thereupon he romained in his housG and care, and hQC 3 right to inherit with the other children. Adulteries were not punishable corpo!'c1lly, If the adulterer paid t,he aggrieved party the amount adjudged by the old F:en 11nd o.greed upon by them, then the injury was pardoned, and the husband wus appeased and retained his honor, He would still live with his vdfr:.: .'.H1c_ there would be no further talk o.bout the matter, In inheritonces all the lepitimate children inherited eoually from their parenis whatever property they had acquired. If there were any mov~ble or landed propert; v-1~1ich they had received fror:i their parents, such went to the nearest rela.tives and the collateral side o; that stock, if there were no legitim:.ttE:: children by an ynasaba. This was the case either with or without a will. In the act of drawing a will, there was no further ceremony than to have written it or to have stated it orally before acquaintances, If any chief was lord of a barangai, then in that caso, the eldest sons of any ynasaba succooded him, If he died, the second son succeeded. If there wero no sons, then, the dnughters succeeded in the same order. If there were no lu2_:itimate cmccessors, the succession went to the nearest relative belonging to the lin,2a2_;e and relationship of the chief who had been the lact possessor of it. It a.ny native who had sLwe wo1nen :11a(e concubines of any of them, and such slave woman had children, those children were free, DS was the sL.J.ve. But if she had no children, she remained a slave. These children, by a slave woman, 3nd those borne by a mar1·ied wo1iic1n, were re'Ia:t'ded nE; i1lezitimo.te, and did not succeed to the inheritnnce with the other children, neither W8re the parents obliged -104- to leave them anythi~~. Even if they were the sons of chiefs, they aid not succeed to the nobility or chieftainship of the parents, nor to their privileges,, but they remained and were reckoned as plebeians and in the number and rank of the other timaguas. Trading Methods and Practices The contracts and negotiations of these natives were generally illegal, each one paying attention to how he ·cJ1ight b otter his own business and interest. Loans with interest Wt'.!re very common and much practiced, and the interests incurred was excessive, The debt dou.bl ed and. increased all the time while payment was delayed, until it stripped the debtor of all hi[3 pos s essionfj, .::end he cmd his chil dron when all their property wao gone, became slaves. Their customary method of trading W3S by bartering one thing for/ another, such as food, cloth, cattle, fowls, lands, houses, fields, slr:tves, fishinggrounds, and palm-trees (both nipa and wild), Sometimes a price intervened, wh:i.ch was paid in gold, as agreed upon, or in metal bells brought from Cl;1ina. These bells they regard as precious jewels; they resemble large pan:3 c1nd are very sonorous. They play upon these at their feasts, and carry them to the WE1r in their boatfl instead of druns ':3.ncl other instruments. There are often dGlays and terms for certnin pc,.yments, and bondsmen wbo int,ervene bind themselves, but always with very usurious and excessive profits and interests, C r i rn e s Crimos were puni::,hcd by request of the aggrieved parties, Especially were thefts punished with greater severity, the robbers being enslaved or sometimes put to death, Tlrn s:1111e wa3 true of insul tine; words, especially whe:n spo>ei1 to chiefs. They had among themsolves many expressions and words which they regarded as the h:L ;hest insult, when said to men and -105- women. These were-pardoned less willingly and with greater difficulty than was personal violence, such as woundint and assaulting, · Religious Beliefs and Practices In m~tters of reliJion, the natives proceed- ed more barbarouGly and with greater blindness than in all the rest, For besides being pagans, without any knowled~e of the true God, thBy neither strove to discover Hin by way of reason, nor had any fixed belief, TLe devil usually deceived them with a thousand errors and blindness. He appebred to them in var:Lous horriblG and frightful forms, and as fierce animals, so that they feared him and trembled before him, They generally worshipped him, and made images of him in the said forms. These were kept in caves and private houses, where they offered th0m perfumes and odors, and food and fruit, calling them gnitos. Others worshipped the sun and the moon 1 and made feasts and drunken revels at the conjunction of these bodies. Some worshipped a yellow-colored bird that dwells in their woods, called batal§., They generally worship and adore th~ crocodile when they see them, by kneeline; down and cJ.as:ping t1wir hands, because of the harm that they received from those reptiles; they believe that by so doing the crocodiles will becoLle appeased and leave them. Their oaths, execrations, and promises are all as above mentioned, namely: fl]lftay bt~Y.illl eat thee, if thou dost not speak trv.th, or fulfill v,1hat thou hast promised, 11 and similDr things. -106- Miguel de Loarca was one of the soldiers who came As a reward for the ser- with Legaspi to the Philippines. vices he rendered to the Spanish Crown in the pacification and conquest of the Philippines he was given an Gncornienda in Panay. He wrote in 1582 ah account .of the Philippines and its people under the title, Ji,elacion de las Islas Fili- It tells, in the words of Loarca himself, of ilall the islands and people::; reduced to the obedience of his royal Jviaj esty. • •• and of the form of e;ov0rnment among both the Spaniards and the natives. And of some customs of the Indians and Moros of these islands , 11 Of the rnarriai:::;e customs of the ancient t.a::iayans, Loarca gives the follo,,iin;?; interDstinr; account: 1 MARRIAGE OF 'rHE CHIEFS. - When any man wishes to marry, he, since the man always asks the woman, calls in certain tima~uas who are resDected in the village. (This is w~at the chiefs d;, For thore appear to be three ran:~s of men in these islands namely, chiefs, tit~guas, who are freemen, and slaves - each cl~ss having different marriage customs.) The chi~fs, then, I say, send as ~a-between some of their t:Lrnncuas, to negotiate the murrj_age. One of these rnen tc.Los the youn13 man's lance from his .father, and Hhen hL-j reaches the house of' the girl's father he thrust the spear into the staircase of the house; and while he holds the lance thus, 1 - B•. ~ R., Vol, V, p. 155, Doth the original in Spanish and the English trcmslation of the Helucio,n are given in this volume. -107thGy invok8 their cods and ancestors, roauostinG them t.o be propitious to this marriage. · If the mc1rria:;e take.s place, tho lnnce belong~~ to the go-between, 0r it is redeemed, After the marrio._·_;r; is agreed upon - that is to say, a.ft()r fixin0; dw amount of the dowry which the husband pays to the wife (which among the chiefs of these islands iG genernlly the sum of one hundred taes, in folrt, slaves, and jewels, &nd is equivalent to one hundred pesos) - they go to brine the bride from the housEi of hE;r onrenti:. One of thE~ Indians tak«3~"3 her on his sho;J.lders; · and on arrivinv at the foot of the stairway to the bridotroom's l"(J" uc: e J ,J. ~ C i-.J J:1· e a f'-f'e,ct c• co ·yi D•·' s u, ..L U'-.) ,:., C, nd ' 1 U.1. C._, ·;re, UUJO ·t J..hn<;tv i·. C' h,.:, · hJJ.J.'v \-1~··i- l]·• When many entreaties have proved useless, the father-in-law comes out and promisos to · ·nc,r a s 1 ave J.I · ,.. s h ,a wi. · 11 go u~J. s·ne :,;1ouncs give the staircase, for the slave; but when u~e reaches the top of the stairway and looks into her fatherin ..law' s housr:) and sees the people &ssern;:.;l ed -within, she again pret0nds to be bashful, and th0 f&therin-law mus~ give her another slave, Aftor she has entered, the same thing takes place; ahd he must f:: ive her a ,jewel to mak<-: her sit dm·m, :.mother to mako her begin to eat, and another before Ghe will drink, While the b8trothed pair an:: drinting_ together jD old man rises, and in a loud voice calls all to silence, as he wishes to speak. He says: 17 So-and-so marries so-and-so, but on the condition that if the rnun shou.ld throuci·1 dissolute conduct f~il to HUpport his wife, she will leave him, and shall not be obli:~;uc~ to retm,n anything of the dowry that he has 0::i.ven her; nrcd she shall have froedom and permission to marry another m·111, And therE.:for8, should the womari betray her husband, ho can take away tho dowry thu.t he 2;c1Ve her, leave :her, c:1.nd marry another woman. Dc all of you witnesses for me to this cornpnc-t,. 11 _When the old man hns ended his speech, they t~ke a dish filled with clean, uncooked rice, and an old woman comes and joins the hands of the pair, and lays them upon the rice. Then, holdin3 their hands thus joined, she throws the rice over a~l those who are present at the banquet. Then tho old woman give;=:, a loud shout, and all answer her with a similar shout; and the murriage contrc1ct or ceremony is completed-. Up to this not enter. J -108time, her parents do not al1ow the yo1:1-ng co1:1ple to eat or sleep to~ether; but by performing this ceremony they deliver her up as his wife. But if, after the marringc contrc:c'i:; has been negotiated by a third party, the man who s eaks marriage should repent the bargain and see!: to marry another . woman,. he. ,..loses h the earnest-money th.1t b.e has given, oven 1.r he as had no int ere ours e with 'the former; b0ccmse wben they commence ne0:otiations for the marria,o:e they begin to give the dowry. If a man say in conversation, or at a drunken fea::,t, nr wish to marry so-and-so., d:aughter of so-an<l-so, 11 and afterward brea.1-:: his promise and refuse to marry her, he is fined for it; and they take C:iJ.way a great part of his property. In regard to the dowry, neither the hus1~and nor the wife can enjoy it until th,ey have children; for until then it belongs to the father-in-law. If the bridegroom is not of' age to marry, or the. bride is too young, both still work in the house of the fatherin-law until they are of age to live together .• MARRIAGE AMONG THE TIMAGUAS .- The timafuas do not follow these usa,:es., 'tlecause they have no property of' their own, They do not observe the ceremony 0f Joining hands over the dish of rice, through rEi)spect for the chie:fs; for that ceremony is for chiefs only. Their rn.arriase is accomplished v.Jhen the pair unite in drinkin:: pitarrilla .from the same cup. Then thr;y give a Gl-,out, and all the guests depart; and thRy are ,c.onsidsreJ as married, for they ar.e not allowed to drin': to"~et,her until late at nir:".h:t. The sarne ceremony is observed by rich and respectable slaves. MARRIAGES AJiDNG SLAVES .• - But the poor slav·es, cwho serve in the houses, m3.rry each other Vil:i.thcmt drinking and without any go-between.. They observe no ceremony,, but sirni)1y say to each other ;,Let us marry • 11 If a chief' hRVE) a slave, one· of his ayoiys, ·who s-erYes in the house, and vdshes to marry him to female slav,e of the sarne class belonging to another chief, he sends an Indian woman as aQ'.ent to the · Ifil;lSt er of the female s1ave, 5ayin,cf · that her rn~.: st ,::;r w:i.shes to marry one of his male :"olDves to the •other's female slave. Aft.or the marriage has been ar-r2nged, he gives his slave 311 earthen .jar, or three or four -109- dishes, and there is no other ceremony, Half of the children born to this couple will belong to the master of the female slave, and the other half will belong to the master of the male slav3. 1.ivhen the time comes when their children are able to work for their masters, the parents are made tumaranpootrns, as we have said; bcJCc:use when a male slave of ~one chief married the female slave of another chief they immediately receive a house for their own use, and go out to work for their masters. If a free man marries a female slave, or vice versa, half of the children are slave~. Thus, if there are two children, on~ is free and the other a slave,'as the parents may choose. The following is an account by the same author of l the religious beliefs of the ancient Bisayans:BELIEF REGARDING THE DEAD.- If those who die from dis~ase are young, the Pintados say that the mangalos, who are goblins, are eating their bowels, wherefore they die; for these people do not know that the corruption of humors causes diseases. They say of those who die in old Gge that thE1 wind comes and snatches away their souls. And of. those who die in old age that the wind comes and snatches ~way their souls. And o:f those who dj_e thus the Arayas (which is a certain alliance of villages~, they say, go to a very high mountain in the Island of Panay, called IV:k1yas. The soul[·, of the Yligueynes, who comprise the people of Cubu, Bohol, and Bantay, go with the god called Sisiburarn:rn, to a very high mountain in the island of Burney, THE GOD 3IDAPA.- They say that there is in the sky another god, called Sidapa. This good possesses a very ta,11 tree on mount Mayas. There he meas1 - Ibid, The best-known work on Filinino methology is F'erdincJ.nd Blumentritt' s, D;Lcc~91-1:-u,"iQ m:i,tolozi,cp de. Fi~ipin.f!§.~ This is tGproduccd ,:in:...Retana 1 s !!;:chivg,dei B1bl1Q.filo F'il~pino ~ vol, 2, -110- ures the lives of all the n0w-born, and places a mark on the tree; when the person's stature equals this mark, he dies immediately. BELIEF CONCF:~{NING THE DESTINATION OF SOULS. It is believed that at death all soulo go directly to the infernal reJions; but that, by means of the maganitos, which are the sacrifices and offerings made to the god Pandague in sight of the mount of Mayas, they are redeemed from S-irnuran und Sie;uinarugan, gods of the lower regions. " It is said that, when the Yligueyr:-es die, the god Maguayen carries them to Inferno, When he has carried them thithe:c in his barangay, Sumpoy, another godl sallies forth, takes them away, and leads them to Sisiburnnen, the god before mentioned, who keeps them all. Good or bad alike, he takes them all on equal terms, when they go to Inferno. But the poor, who have no one to offer sacrifices for them, i'em::dn forever, in the inferno, and the god· of those regions eats them, or koeps them fareve~ in prise~. From this it will bo seen how little their being good or bad avails tbem, and how much·. reason they have to ~ate poverty. BAYLANAS.- The natives of these islands have neither time nor place set apart for the offering of prayers and sacrifices to their gods. It is only in cAse of sickness, and in times of seed-uowing or of war, that sacrifices are offered, Th0se sacrifices are c.s.lled bayJ_c'.'LJl<;JS, c1.nd the priest em.Jes, or the men who perform this office, are also called baylanes, The priestesses dress vdry gaily with garlands on their heads, and are resplend8nt with gold. They bring to the place of sacrifice some pitarrillas (a kind of earthen jar) full of ricewine, besides a livG hog r:.nd a quantity of prepared food, Thon tho priestess chants her songs and invo~ces the demon, who appears to her all :'i;listening j_n gold, Then he ent01°s hf)r body and hurls her to the ground, foaming at the mouth as one possessed. In this state she doclares whether the sick person is to recover or not. In rego.rd to other matters, she foretells the future. All this takes placo to the sound of bells· and kettle-drums, 'I'hen she rises and taking a spear, she pierces the heart of the hog. I -111- They dress it and prepo.re a dish for the demons. Upon an altar erected there, they place the dreased hog, rice, bananns, wine, ~nd all the other articles of food that they have brought. All this is done in behalf of sic~ persons, or to redeem those who are confined in the infernal regions. When they go to war or on a plu.ndering expodition, they offer prayers .to Varangao who is the rainbow, and to their gods, Ynaguirdd and Mocc1nduc. . For the redornption of souls detained in the inferno above mentioned, they invoke also their ancestors, 2nd the dead, claiming to see them and receive answers to their questions, · BELIEF CONCERi'HNG THE WORLD. - :rhe Go.,2.. Mo.c.Q.P..They believe that the world has no end, They say that Maco.ptan dwells highest in the sky. They consider him a bad god, because h~ sends disoase and death among them, seying that because :1e has not eaten anything of this world, or dr1.mk any pitarrillas, he does not love them, and so kills them, t.fill. - THE GOD LALAHON.- It is said that the divinity Lalahon dwells in a volcano in Negros icland, when she hurls fire. The volcano is about five leagues from the town of Arevalo. They invoke L3lahon for ·their harvest; w:1er1 she does not choose to grant good harvest she sends ~he locusts to destroy and consume the crops. This Lalahon is a woman. BURIALS.- These natives bury their dead in certain wooden coffins, in their own houses. They bury ~ith the dead, ~old, cloth, and other valuable objects - saying that if they depart ri.ch thuy wj_lJ. be well received in the other wor]. d, but coldly if they go poor, HOW THEY GUARD THE DEAD. - ·when anyone dies, the people light many fires near his house; and ;:i.t night armed men go to act as sentinels about his coffin, for fear that the sorcerers (who are in this country also) may come and touch the coffin, for then the coffin would imruedi:1tely bErst open· and a great stench issue from tho corpse, which could not any longer remain in the coffin. For this reason I they keep watch for several nights. -112- LARAO OF THE DEAD. - 'THAT IS, MOURNING. - One of tho obse.""Vences wl1ich is carried out with most rigor is that called larao ~ This rulo requires that ,~,hen a chief dies c.11 mi..:.st mourn him, and. must observe the followin~ restrictions: No one shall quarrel with any other durin,FJ' th() tim3 of mourn.in~, and especially at the time of the burial~ Spears must be carried point, clowrr>1urd, and da,srers be carried in the belt hilt rover::.'luci, l'Jo gala or colored dress shall be worn d:irin,c,: thc1t time, ':L'he1"0 must be no singing on board a 6ar~ngay ~hen returning to the village, but strict silence is maintained. They make an enclosure around tho house of the dead man; and. if anyone, great ,Jr small, pa,ss 12s by and transgresses this bound, he chall be ounishoti. In order that all men may know of a cl..,ief T s death and no ono feign ignoranc:f3, one of the timac:uas tiho is held in hot10r goes through trw v:U.lag8 Dnd mo.kes announcerner1t of the rnou:::·ri:Li1g. He who trc.msgresses the law must -pay the pe~al~y, without fail. If he who does ":,hj_~, w:r.ori.g bu e.. s::i.ave - one of tho3e who serve 1ivitnout the o.we::..2.ino.: - 2nd has !lot the means to pay, his owner pays fo; him; ~ut ~he lattor takes the slave ~o his own housa: tha~ he may servo him, and makes him an ayoey. They say that these rulos were left to them by :Jublubar: and Panas. To some, especially to the relisious, it has seemed us if they were too rigorous for these peopJ.e; b 1.1t they were general amonc:: chiefs, t imaguas, and slaves. In the sumo a:::count, E.£l@.£iori_.de las IslJ.~_E]J iPJ..!Hlll., Loarca makes the follov:ing observations of the religion, government and laws of the Tagalogs:l THE GOD BATALA,- According to tho religion formerly observed by these Moros, 2 thay worshippod 1 ,:1-r--7. ]·-- . , 1 - .;.;.!2,±Q,.' pp. 171 --.0 2 - Loarcu. here is referri.ng to the inhabitants of Manila and neighboring towns and villcJ..'!es where lfohammedan beliefs and practices had been introduced. ~113a deity callod among them Batala, which properly They s2ic1 thut they adored this 3atala bec~use he was the Lord of all, and had created human beings and vill.agcs. 'l'hey_ said that this Batala had ma.ny agents under hirn, whoi~ he sent to this world to prdduca, in behalf of m3n, what is yielded here. 'f.'hesG bein?c;s were called a:1:Lt£§.J and ' an i't· 0 na cl a specici • 1 o:..f''"'' ' eacn 1 ice. ~ Jrno o f_ t11em were means "God. 11 1 C, for the fields, ~nd some for thase who journoy by sea; some for those vvl10 went to '\!>Jar, .1nd sour~ fo:c diseases. Each 2nito was therefore named for his office; there was, f~r inst&nce, the Qnito of the fields, and the Qnito.of the rain. To these anitos the people offered sac~ifices, when they desired anything - to each ono accorcang to his office. The mode of sacrifice was like that of the Pintados. They summoned a cataJ.011.an, which is the same as the vaylan among the Fin"ca6.os, that is, a prieot. He offered the saciifice, requesti~g from the anito whatever the people desirad him to ask, and heaping up great qua:1tities of rice, meat and fish. His invocations last8d until the derion entered his tody, when the cataloncm f,3ll. into a sr.-Joon, foardng at the mouth. TJ.1e Ind:Lrns sang, d.ran~f .snrl f e2 steel until the catalonan camo to himself, and told them the answer that the c.niJ.:.o J:-wd ;2:iven to him. If the sacrifice was in behalf of a-sick person, they offered many golden chains and ornaments, saying that they were paying a ransom for the sisk person's health. This invosation of the anito continued as long as the sickness lasted. When the natives were asked why the sacrifices were made to th3 anit;o, and not to Batala, they answered that Batala was a groat Lord, and no one could spea~c to him. He lived in the sky; but the anito, who was of such a nature that he came down here to talk with men, wus to the Batala as a minister, and interceded for them. In some places, and e.specially in the mountain district:~3, when tht3 fatlinl', mother, or other relative dios, the peopJ.e unit~ in making a small wooden idol, and rresarve it. Accordingly there is a houso ,1hich cont.,1ins one hundred of those idols. These im.3.g:es also a:c·e called ,fillitos, for- the:,, say that When people die, they [';O to serve the Batala. 'l'here.fore they make sacrifices -114to these anitos, offering them food, wine, and gold ornaments; and request them to be int0rcessors for them before the }3atala, whom they regard as God. GOVERNlviEi.\JT OF' T:i-iE MOROS• - Among the Moros there is precisely the same lack of government as among the Pinta dos. 1rhey had chiefs in thei~. . rGspective districts, whom the people ob8J(3d;_ tHey punish9d crimirrnls, c.nd J.nid down the lavrn t11~t must be observed. In the villag0s, where they had ten or twelve chiefs, one only -- the richest of them -was he whom all obeyed. They greatly esteem an ancient J.ineafc, which is therefore a great advantage to him wha desires to be a lord, When laws·were to be enacted for governing the commonwealth, th:J e;reatest chief,- whom all th,c! rest obeyod, assembled in his own house all the other chiefs of the village; and when they had corne, he ma de n spr:;ecli, declaring that, to correct the many criminal. acts ·which were being committed, it w.:t:3 necessary that ttey impose penalties and enact or·dinances, so that the:rn evils might be remedied and that all might live in peace. This policy was not in vogue among the Pin"t,ad.os, because no one of them was willing to recognize another as his superior. Then the other chiefs replied that this seemed good to them; and that, since he was the greatest chief of all, he might do whatever appeared to him just, and they would approve it. Accordingly, t ho.t chief made sueh regulations as he de0med necessary; for these ~-'Toros possses tte art of writing, which no other natives of the islands have. 'rhe other chiefs npproved what he ordained. Immediately c&me a public crier, whom they call umalaho_.£illl, who io properly a rnc17or-d'.)mo, or steward; he took a bell end went th:.r:'ou,q::1 the village, announcing in each district the re~:ulations which had been mude. The people re?lied that they would obey. Thus the umalahocan went. from villa{:e to village, through the whole distri c't of th:i.s ci1ief; and from that time on he who incurred tte penalties of law was taken to the chief, who sent0nced him accordingly. If the ponalty be death, and th~ condemned men say that ho prefers to be a slave, he is pardoned, and becomes & slave. All the othor chiefs are ~lso judges, eac:.-1 in his own d.ist:cict; but ·when any in~ortant case arises the head chief calls all -115the others together, in ordor to decide it, an~ the affah• is sc:ittled by tl10 vote of o.11. The ch:iefs are accustor..1ed to impose the taxes; but therf:) is no fixed amount for thes_e, save what the proper judge decrees shall be paid. ' MJ'.RRIAGES. - The so l\lioros followed in their marriages the same customs ns those of t:ne Pin-t:.u.dos} in giving the dowry. Thus, if.' the man should, contrary to the woman's desire, breuk his pled~o and nnro1l t:be rnc:trria~e, he would los{::1 tho dO'lr1ry, c:nd she would retain it, free from him. Likewise, if the wife left the husband she was obliged to return h~m tho dowry. If _she committed adultery and the l1usband therefore left her, she returnej him double the amount of the dm,Jry. If the wife lef"i:, the husb&nd in order to marry [1nother, the s3cond husband. was obliged to repay to 'chcJ first hurJband the dowry which the latter had given +,o the woman, and to pny a fine, more or less - such an amount as the judge should order him to givo. If the :nu::band we::.." 3 a ch::.ef, a.nd caught his w:1.fe in the ac-:i of committing adultE,ry, l • .. t o pur:isn • , ner w::..tL d oo t 1J.1, an CJ t-h h e h a d t,,1e rizh'., _,_ u adul tcrer also, arid could slay t:1ern with iin~Junity. If h8 killed one and the o~hcr escaped, the::e ir'JO'.lld be open war between tlle. t,1110 families until tho o·t;her adulterer died. If both escaped, thGy wust pay for their lives with a certain w ei::;h:, of ;old. If -thoy were thiefs, the penalty was one bunrt~ed tacs,fifty for the woman and fifty for the udul~or8r. This done, they were pardoned, and remained friends. If they were tin~guas, they incurred a :ighter penalty. 1 1 .t.. • 1 0 There was 2rnon~ tho nati V8S a law It was a p~tty theft if t~a amount were less than four taes i tha·!::, :i.s, t1'Jeff~Y pesos); but if more than that suM 1 it was n ser~ous offense. He who comr;litted the former mu3 4~ return 1 ·o-,·"'en+-·,r1ce·.J at ·f-'"E' ,_1'··n the t.--;'0ld ' C.:-'."rld thc,n I.) c. ):;. '•' ~> • •J , J.1 :,, Wl' - ••'- ] ~ OP ..r.. l! J,"" judge, to pay a fine in money. If it wer1.) the p;r·e'1tcr thoft, invo1. vt:r. .g an amount of fou:r ta es or upv!nrd, he incurred the penalty of slavery. But ii the goods stolon amounted to a cati (catty) of p:old, the penalty was doatl'1, or tlle ern:,JavC;rnont of the culprit and his children and all those of his housohold. 'I'HIEVES. - concerning thisvos. 0 J ,K L, It was also a law th~t for the first theft the· penalty was a fine in money, for the sGcond, sl.qv~~ry; -116- for further offenses, it was death, Or, if pjr-. doned, as described above he was made a slave, with his wife and children, fhis punishment did not apply to the son who proved ~hat he was outside the house -- whether he d1velt in a .house of' his own or lived with relatives on an indeponden~ footing; and therefore he was freo. Only those who lived in the house of the? delinouent wero J.iaiJlo to punishment, because they all were suspected of kno·,JJ.cdp;o of tiiG theft. Thero was also a law that anyone who spoke aisrespGctfully of a chief, or uttercC abusive langua~e to him, W3S liable to death. If he could redeem his life, a fino of fifteen ta0s of gold wns imposed. If he did not have the moans to pay and rolatives did not contribute to ransom him, and the dolinguent begged for mercy, saying that them h0 would become a slave, his life was spared, and he became the sl~vo of the injured purty, Fo~ this reason the penalty of a fine was available for him who possessed wenlth. If the quarrel were between persons o~ equ~l ran~; the chief~ settled the matter according to justice &nd tlwir laws, and t;he li1<e penulty ·.;J: s Ln;)osed. If the delinquent refused ~o pay 2ccordinz ~o t~is sentGnce, war was dec~ared b~twaen t~e villages or the factions. Hostilitiss then followe6; nrti from that tiws those who were captured wore ons~uved. 1 ONE MAY BE RELEASED AFTER PAYI~\JG THE sui-: DECREED; UNTIL THE::'1 HE IS A SLAVE~- It was a J.c:w tho.t if, when two timagua s were to1ethe.r, 8i t.hcn' of tt,ern insult Gd the other, he must pay a sum'o.f money according to the nature of tho i~sult, ¼hich was decided by the judge. If the insult were a ~ross one, the fine was large accordingly; and if tbe cu~_prit J1[;d not the mean3 to pay more them five taus, hG becc1m8 the slave .of the injured person, If tho delinquont be~ged from the chief or some other frj_end the fc1vor of lendinR: h:.m the money, he became the slave of him who loan;d th~ money. This slavery extended onl~r to the culprit, and not to his children or rcl~~ives, except to children who wero born during his slavery. It is usu.::tl among the natives o:f this islo.nd to aid one another with money-loans. Ho who borrowed from a chief or a tim2gua retained the money until a -117- fj_xed time had elapsed, during which he mic_;ht use the money that was lent to him; and besides, he divided with the lender the profit that he made, in acknowledgmont, of the favor that he had received. It was a law that if he who borrowed the money became insolvent, anJ had n0t means to pay his debt, he w:Js considered a slc1ve thcre_+>or, together with the children born during his slavery; those already horn v11ore free, It was a l.A.VJ amor:g these people, when two men formed a ~ucJ.ness partnership in which each placod the same amount of :110,1ey, th2t if one o.f tham went to trnffic v<iith the money belon6 hlg -'e,r) both, and. while on a trading ,journey wer3 cc,ptin-·ed oy enemies, the other raan wl-io re~;1ained in ti:1c v:Llla0 e must go to ransom hi,3 partner, w ::i.th 11,1J_f ;)f the :car:sorn·~price agreed upon; and the captive was then rcleasef irom liability -- not only for -whut was due to t}1e partnership: ~1ut for the amount wl:.ich was aftenrnrd if::i.ven for his ransom, and was not obliged to pay anything. If. the rr:an who lost "~he monoy loct it in _'3.'-1I11bling, or by spending jt, ·with women, i:w w2s obli[:1E..:(:' to repay to ,. +- -~ c• h.. J.p • ' +-v }·.1e a' ..r 1ui.:,.nt, ,. , • i-_lC • I..l 118 l ' ,l c.rd, : • ··/ n -1' ,-, • t h 8 ,_par..,r.·c.,r,., W•. ..: 1cL, v11~re from, &nd ho and his child:cen were o'Jl:.p-cd to pay it. If t]1e amount were so s2·e2..-c th:1-:.-:, they could rot po.y it' within :;ho time agreed upon, :ie a;id Lnlf his children would become the slavss of the ourtne~. If there wer3 two children, one w2,s 2 slave,· :rnd the othe:;_, v;as free; if' four 1 two were sL.tvcs, :111d two wsre free; and so on \vi th any la::,ger nun .ber. I:f the childrc,n were a:Jle to r-c:iy their fatherr s d(Jbt aftcr1 1 ward, they were set free. -118- Juan de Plo.sencia, a Franciscan friar, came to the Philippines in 1577. He wB.s one of a small group of Fran- ciscan priests that arrived that year, the first of their Order to come to tho Philippines. Father Plasencia had, among his natural endowments, an aptitude for learning new languages~ Having been assigned as a missionary to the province of Laguna, ho quickly acquired a mastery· of the Tagalog language. Within a short time after his arrival, he couJ.d speak fluently and eloquently in tl:at lang'!..tage. During the governorship of Santiago de Vera (1584 to 1590), Father Plasencia wus commissioned to prepere an authoritative report on Filipino customary law. In pur- suance of his commission, Father Plasencia '\lffot. G e.n account of the customs of the Tagalogs, under the title "Las Costumbres diJ los Tagaloe • 11 To obtain the informRtion that he wanted, he interviewed several of the old men in tho province, all known to him for their intelligence and for their knowledge of thoir customs and usagas. Fnther Plasencia 1 s"Las Costurnbres do los Tagalos" was submitted to Governor r.,e Vera in 1589. Copies thereof wero furnished to alcc.tldes mayores for their information and guidance in the settlement of disputes an~ng the Filipinos. -119- For many years, controversies arising among the Filipinos conccrnin_r:i; such matters as the status of slave,s, successions, inheritances, adoptions, wills and other matters of civil nature were decided by the alcaldes rrayores in accordance with Filipino notions and ideals of justice such as described nnd explained in Father Plasencia's tumbres de los Tagalo s. n account has been called, 11 Las Cos- It is for this ruason that the 11 the first civil code of the Phil- ippines." Father Plasencia's account reads as follows: l DATOS AND BAHANGAYES.- This peopl.o always had chiefs, called by them datos2, who governed them and wero captains in their ~ars, and ~horn they obeyed und reverenced. The subject who comnitted any offense against then, or spoke but H wo~d3 to their wives 0nd children, was severely punished. 1 - B.&. R,, volume?, pp. 173-184. 'l he footnotes accomprmyine: this account w0re 111/i".'ittrm by Dr. T. II. Pnrdo de T::i.vora for the edition ~hich he made of Plasencia's work. 1'he Taver.J od±tion wqs publit.:hed in Madrid :L:r:1 ~~8?2, under the title L~!.§. Costumbror; do los T,.ag:3.los en iJlF)ll'as sog:,.:un. el P. Plas:;ncia. 1 2 - Nowadays this expression is not used in Tag::i.log. Among the Mo.lays datu or datu_k originally moant grnndfnt.her, head of a farnilf, v,1hicli was none other than the members of a barangay. In Mindanao and <Jol.9 this title is preserved to de3ic;nate certuin chiefs. 3 - Undoubtedly an 11 offonsiv8 11 word. ..120- These chiefs ruled over but few people; sometimes as many as hundred houses, sometimes oven less t:b1m thirty. This tribal gathering is c~lled in Tagalog a barang:ax. It was inferred that the reason for giving themselves this name arose from the fact (as they classed, by their l.anguageJ, among the TfJal.ay nations} that ·(Jhen they came to this land, the head of the barangay4 which is a boat, thus called, became a data. And so, even at the present day, it is ascertained that tµis harangay in its origin was a family of parents and children, relations and slaves. There were of many of these barangays in each town, or, at least., on a~count of wars, they did not settle far from one another. They were not, however, subj e,ct to one another, except in friendship, and relationship. The chiefs, in their various wars, helped one another with their r·espective baran.gays .5 SOCIAL CLASSES • .;. In addition to the chiefs, whc correspond to ou.r knights, there were three castes; ncbles, commoners, and slaves.. The nobles were the free-born whom they call maharlica .6 They clid not pay tax or tribute to the dato, but must accompany him in war., at their own .expense. The chief 4 - The r~al Tagalog word is Balaga:y:. 5 They we~e smal:t. conf.ederaci(.--s whi.ch in some pla.., ces, were governed by a chief who bore: the title _of Rad.ia or Lad.Ja, during the Hindu pe1:iod, and that of Sultan, when Islanism appeared in these Is.lands. At time the title of H,a:r~ was used, which reveals high pride, and u11.do1.l!!btedly Hindu origin, of th0 chief who bore this :title. H:ari, in Sanskrit, signifies Brahma, th0 Sun, Vichnou. The sovereigns. o.f tne Javanese Kingdom of lV.Iadjapahit bore, among others, the title of "descendant of the race of Hari." a 6 - Maha.rlica a,omes from the Sanskrit rnahardhika, and signifies, "who enjoys liberty.n Calli.ng them 11 freed. menu is improper-, because they were never slaves, although there are some freedmen -who properly were f-;uch: they were free men who depended on nebody except the dato, in so far as their obligations to him were in accordance with the ugali, which defiped the rights of ,each person in the barangay .• -121- offered them befor~hand a feast, and afterward they divided the spoils. Moreover, when the dJ.to went upon the water those whom he summoned rowed for him. lf he tuilt a house, they helped h1m, Etnd had to be fed for it. The same was true v1lwn t,he whole barangay went to clear up his lands for tillage. The lands which they inhabited vver2 dividc)d among the whole bdrangay, especially the irrigate~ ,ortion und thus each one ~new his own. No one belonging to anther baran~ay would cultivate them unless after purchase or inheritance. LANDS.- The lands on tho tinguos,7 or mountain ridges are not divided, but owned in con~on by the barangay. Consequently, at the time of the rice harvest, any indi viducil or any particular baran3ay, al though he may have come from some o+:,her village, if he commcnco~:1 to clear any 1and may so,._,v it, and no one can compel him to abandon it. There are some villages (as, for example, P:i.la de la Laguna), in which the.se nobles or ma.harl:i.cas, paid annually to the data a hundred gantas of rice. The reeson of this was that, at th~ time of their settle~ent there, another chief occupied tiw la.nds, which the nev·l ch:i.e;f, upon his arrival, bou::;ht wit b. his own e;old; and therefore the members of his barangay paid him for thG arable land, and he divided it, arnong those whom he ------7 - Tingi is an old Tagalog word which does not mean anything nowadays, but which wa::;; use(l in t.he days of th8 conquest to signify mountain. Fro::n thL, circumsto.ncG the mountain people were called. tingianes (pronounced. tinguianes), a term which later was ap~liod orly to a certain class of non-Christians inhabiting the mountains of northc:!rr. . Luzon. flThe tin.r:i::ues extend from the rnounto ins of :3u.n. Por.;lo via Nacarlan-.~ up to CiJ.laylayan, where stoud the old capital of Tayabas, and from there begins the range of mountains of Cabinti up to Vilingviling, which is the summit of M".:.i.bitac. (Santos.- Vocabulorio_j'ag_Ql.Q..[, Manil:1, 1794, in tl::le preface.) The whole lake of Bai is surrounded by vct~J steep mountains, which thoso people call tingui::Js in thG 1 a,salog lant?:;uage.n {San Antonio, Q]::Qpi.cas, etc., I, II, p, 1 471.) -122- saw fit to rewarct. 8 But now, since the adv0nt of the Spaniard, it is not so dividud. FISHERIES.- Tho chiofs i~ com8 villages had also fisheries, with establiah8d li~its, and secti0ns of the riv8rs for markets. At these no 0ne could fish, or trade in thG markets, without poy~ng for the privilege, unless he bolongc1d to the chief's barn.ngay or village, COMivfONERS ,- The comrnoners9 arc cal:l.od ali.J?Jllg namamah§..Y, They ar0 married, and s e:rvc: c hc:Lr m~J.S :ter, whether he be a dato cir not, with half of their cultivated lands, as was agreed upon in the be~inning. Thc:y accompanied h1m wnenever he vrnnt beyond the island, and rowed for him, TheJ live in their own houses, and are lords of their property and gold. Their children inherit it, and enjoy their property and iands, The children, then, enjoy tho roLk of I 8 - It is to bo observed, there we~e threo kinds of [ property: that which belongs to each inhabitant of the ba, rangay; that of the ba.ranc,;2.y i11 common, that of the chief acquired by him by purcnase from a.not her chief or baro.ngay, In Sumatra, the right of propcirty is acquired 'Jy orir.;inal occupatio11: proprietorship in ~-and may bs tranuforred thru inheritance, as it can not be sold,. All the :)coples of [ the lVJalay race were governed and· sot1e aru cve:i.1 today, by an t2.£!3.I, which literally signifies custo.rri, •.1s:1.ge, 'rhe laws,wnich are unwritten, wertJ preserved :1.n traditions handed down from father to son, and gener~Jly ~he older peo- I pJ.e, being more practical, and whose exp,Jd.c:nc;e en].bled them to understand their own customs, were the ones that decided their suits, When they· pronouncr:id t}:10ir cJ.r:;cisious, 11 thoy did not say, Thus seith the 2.mJ, 11 but, 11 :-:n:ch is the custom, !I which inc 'ragalo:; is ill1E.-~:1J.j:. , 9 - This term is very exact: the aJ. ipin[; namamahay were perfectly comparable to the cowm.one:t2 of ~ip;:dn, 'fi1-0 Tagalog alipin rlcnot es·, nevorthGl Gss, a slave, but, it j_n UB ed here with the term nam3mahay, which means 11 whrJ has a house, 11 or 11 who is in his houso, 11 v-1hich g iVeEJ one to u.ndrn."c;tanJ tbat they were consider::.d as 11 of the hour3c 11 tl.1at is, as mornbers of the family. These persons could becorn0 a maharlica by paying a certain alilount to th8ir masters, a circums·i-:,ance which gave rise to the appelation of freed men of which we spoke elsewhere. I ! 1· 1· -123- their fathers, anct they cannot be made .sla'res. ( SE!_·· g_ui12:uilfr) nor can either parent3 or children be sold. If they should fall by inheritance into the hands of a son of their master who was voing ta dwell in another village, t:1rq could not be tal:en from their own village and carried with him, but thej would remain in their native village, doing service there and cultivating the sowed lands. SLAVES - Tho slaves are called .QJiD:i_:;11,g sJ~ gui guilir,10. They serve their master in his house and on his cultivated J.ands, and mE1 y be sold. Tlw master grants ther,1, should he see fit, and providing that he ·has profited through their industry, a portion of their harvests, so that they may work faithfully~ For these reasons, servants wto nro born in the house of their master are rareJ.y, if ever, sold. That is the lost of captives in war, and of those brought up in the harvest fields. SLAVES BY REASON OF DEBT. - Those to whom a debt was owed transferred the debt to ano~hor, thereby thems el vos making u prof j_ t, und r,,duc in;j; tLe wretched debtors to a slavery which was ~ot their natural lot.l~ If any person among those who were 10 .,.. It, would not bo so car.y +;o ~ive tho ety:nology of the term sagu:l.guilir (better sagigilir J did we not 1mderstand the meaning of namamahay. G~ilir or, with more ortographic propriety gilir, means 11 house doo::.1 1 in 'J.'agaJ_og, and gicilir is a compound which mGans, door-hea.d; hence aliping: . · 1 1r . s1Jn1 . . f'.ieu-'I t11e ],. ],.. . . • t o ~ive , . 1 sag1g1 s_.ave W110 naa no rign~ wi. tt.11in doors, and who, as momber of tho Jo-.,,rnst grade of the social scale, ho.d. no right in thEl house of his r,12.ste1~ nay more than a door-head has. Hu is not ~,,orthy to live in it, and ordinarily he lives in the lowe3t pa~t of the house, with the animals J.nd. t}1e imp.laments of labor, of fi:-Jhing, etc. etc. 11 - This detestabJ.E:! custom .,ms crJiilrron anong :J.11 iJialays. c• , l • • d , ' . • I n ,:Jumatre, w .non a man rd.ies -w,10 is u1 .ei::)'i; co, ,Go c.n.o .,_,,J:1er, 11J.s children render services, that is, they inherit the obligations of thei~ fathor. Those who are slaves by debt have the privilege of changinc masters if aoneone or a relative pciid the debt for them. In this c3se they went to serve this person as a guarantee and to pay off the irrterestc of the amount paid, which they repaid, when they were able to do so, in order to regain their liberty. .J.. 1 1 -124made slaves (§§...J?U~.c:·uiJ_ir) - through ·,vn.r, by the ·:.:.ro.de 0f go}_usfo.l.tl1, or oth8.cNise - happoned ·co possess any gold be/ond tho sum that he had to give hj_s master, he r,:m,somed himsoJf, becoming tl1us a npmamaho.y, or whclt. \i\1 8 call. a commoner. The tJrice of this ransom was never less than five tacls,12 and from that upwards; and if he ~ave ten or moro 1 ta. el ,'.3, as they might ngree, he b eca.me wholly free. An amuoing corc-;Jnr)n-y accompanied this c1-wtom, Afte:r' having divided all the trinkets which the slnv~ posse;sed, if ha maintained a houso of his own, they divided even tha pots and jars, arid if an odd one of these remained, they broke it; and if a piece of cloth were left, they parted it in the middle, ·The difference between the _glio.·i nr nari§J!@.h~ and the al -:D:!.ng s..Q.__gg_ip:ut_l~.t, should be noted; for, by a confuJion of the t~o terms, many have boen classed as slaves who really are not. The Indians seeing tnnt the c:-~lcaldeD-mnyor do not underotand · th~s, have adoptod_t:~e custom of takin[2 awuy the rr1a 1'"ll"J" ~,.-,('., of ChlldI. . en o·f the a-l 1p-ir·1rr n·3.·111r:ir•1c:h" ,t::!_~r.. , 1 riy ''·'O'l] c o-r tl-·,e ·:o, J'r,-'.,,.,,., q<::i ·.,·11·:,:r1J '.'! ·ir· t hem c:;·~s +-n" ..; vv , . ., .._ L ~';.;;...:.~'L:. uo ,..i.;;:..:a.:;;.;.c..~.c:.::::,._., '9.'~ servants in their hous0holds, w~~ch is ille~ul, anct if the al ipjJ:!E._J2f'Ine_mahq_y :'3hoeld appe.•1J. to ju.stic e, it io proved. U1nt ho is an fl: j_cinr as well <.~s his father anJ ruoth0r before him and no re~nrvation is m.ad.G as to wh0ther he ::.s :.11:. -oinP:_pam:1rnal:ay or al ipir~g sa. __guiP.:uilir. H0 is at one c con::d.clered o.n a. 7.. il:J.:n, without further docl.1ration. In this Woy .1e l.....,_ .,,eco,,:es a sa 1~tµgu1~J.r, a.nu. is even so J.a.. Consoquen:rJ.;-, the aJ.cc:tJ.des-r:1uyo:c f,hoJ.J.cl be irstructed to ascert2in, vJhen nnyorw askn for hi.s :1lJp:i_Q, to which class .he b elor;.g:s, [,.nd tc ha.V'J the nnswer put in the document thLlt thGy give ~im~ J. • • _ . . .!~ --~ c.,~ J,~c_ . . ._ 1 ,.:ti. .,.... .A.C) _, .;.> J 1 YI • •-, • :J • i 1 0·1-;,·, ,.:.u..,Av '·u1·,c, T th CHITIJ'RE'r\J .u -, •,._;,. .Ln · cse t.circe c J.asses, those who are rnalwrlicns on both the father's a,nd mother's side contim7et'o bo so forevr::ir; and if it (:IT -------- 12 - A tnel o.f gold was worth. at the time o.f the conquest, ten real es fu.e:ctes; M,1l1a1~ giv01.., to i 1:, the value of one hundred ten francs, It is oossiblc that this latter value was what the tael had :Lo whlr:!11 P. Plasencia refers. -125happens that they should become slaves, it is through marriage, as I. shall soon explain. If these maharlicas had children among their slaves, the children and their mothers becarue free; if cne of them had children by the slave-woman of another, she was compelled, v•1h0n pregnant, to give her master half of a gold tael, because o.f her risk of death, and for her inability to lc:bor durin,':~ the pregnancy. In such a-· case· half of the child was free - namely, the half belonging to the father, who supplied the child, with food. If he did not do this, he showed that he did not recognize hifu as his child, in which case the litter was wholly a slave. If a free woman had children by a slD.ve, they were all free, provided he were not her husband. ~~RRIAGES OF FREEWlEN WITH SLAVES.- If two persor.s married, of :Phom one was a maharlica and the other a slave, whether namarnahay_ or sa e;ui.e:uiJ.ir, the children were divided; the first, whether male or female, belonged to the father; as did the third and fifth; the second, the fourth, and the sixth fell to the mother, and so on. In tnis manner, if the father were free, all those who belonged to him were free; if he were a slnve, all those who belonged to him were slaves; and the same applied to the mother. If there should not be more than one child he was hali free and hnlf slave. The only question here concerned the division, whether the child were male or fenwle. Those who become slaves fnll under the category of servitude -which was their parent's, either namarnahay or sa guiguilil..,. If there were an odd number of children, th.e odd one was haJ.f free und ho.lf sla.ve. I have not been able to ascer':.a.in with any certainty when or at what age the division of children was made, for each one suited himself in this respect. Of these two kinds of 3lnves the sa guiguilir could be sold, but not the namamahay and their children, nor could they be transferred. However, they could be transfErrod .from thG barangay by inheritance, provided they remained in the same village.13 13 - This confirms what we have said in connection with the confederacies which existed at the arrival of the Spaniards. 'fhe barang.Jys v.ere simply a family group, lar~e -126The maharlicas could not, after marriage, move from one village to another, or from one barangay to another, without paying a certain fine in gold, as arraneed among them, . This fine was larger or smaller according to the inclination of the different villages, runnine; from one to three taels and a banquet to the entire barangay, Failure to pt\Y the fine might result in c1 war betweoL the barangay which the person left and thu one which he ent~red. This applied equally to men and womec, excep~ that when one married a woman of another vj_llage, t:i1e children were afterwards divided equally between the two bar.s.ng,:iys. This .::tr-r.~mc;ement kept them obediont to the data, or chief, which is no longer the case- because, if the' dato is encrr:etic and cornr:iands what the religious fathers enjoiii him, they soon leave him and go to other villages and other d.atos, who endure and protect them anci do not or·der them about. This is the kind of dato that the-:,;- r1ow prefer, not him who has the spirit of commanct,14 There is a great need of . reform in this, for the chiefs are spiritless and fainthearted. INVESTIGATION OF SUITS,- Investigations made and senteacus passed by ttrn dato must take place :i.n the presence bf those of his barangay. If any of the litigants felt himself aggrieved, an arbiter was unanimously named from another viJ.la:::;e or barangay, whether he were a data or not; slnco they had for this purpose some persons, known as :air and just men, whD were s:1id to give tru~.3 ,judgment according to their customs. If the controversy lay Uetween two chiefs, when they wished to avoid war, they also convoked judges to act as arbiters; they did the same if the disputEl.nts belonged to t,,-vo different barangays. In this ceremony they always had to drink, the -plaintiff invitin~ the others. ~ ------or small, 1r.Jith its sJ..aves of various rankr:-1. A number of barangays .formed a villo.ge under the government of the Dato who was r.iost powerful i:n that community, using different titles; Cat, Ladya ( for Radja), Laka, Sul tan, etc. etc, 14 - Which goes to sho1,11 that, at all times and in all places, man of whatever race fled from tyranny. -127LAWS GOV1~RNING CAPITAL PUNISHlV[ENT. - They had laws by which they condernnec;_ t-:J death a man of J.ov1 birth who insulted the daughter or wife of a chief; likewise witches, and others of the sa~e class. They condemned no one to [JJ.aver-1, unless he merited the death-penalty. As for the witches, they killed theo, and their chiJ.dren &nd accomplices became slavos of the chief, nfte~ he had made somo recompense to the injured perr5on. All other of·rctb y ..r·ines in · goJ.lcJ., ·,_., w;1J.c.l.!., ,·1r. ·r not, f enser; were punis.10 1. paid with promptness, expo[rnd the culprit to serve, until the paymAnt should be madej the person a~grieved, to whom tho money was to be pfdd. This w~:.s do:'.1e in the follm-l)ing way: Half the cultivated lnnds and all their produce belonged to the master, The master provided ttie culprit with food and clothing, thuc enslaving tho culprit and his childr·en until such t,j.r11e as he might ama;3s enough money to pay the f ir..e. If the father should by chance pay his debt, '.::ihe muster then claimed that he had fed and clothed his children, and should be paid thorefor, In this way he kept possession of the children if th8 payment could not be met, This last was usunlly the c~se, 0nd they remaineq slaves. If the culprit had c.,orr~c relative or fri8nd who paid for him, ho was obliged to r~n~er the latter half his sarvics until he was paid - not, however, sorvic p, within tho howJG as al:i.ping sa guiguilir, but living independently, as Etl:i.p:in t:.am1111a.hay. If tho creditor were not serve1 in this wise, the culprit he~ to pay the double of what was lent Lim. In this way sloves were rnnde by debt: ei~her sa gui3uilir, if tl1ey- scr·vnd the mastc:r to whom tho jud:pnont applj_ed; or aliping namum<:thaJ, if tlwy sfirved the p0r-son who lent them wherewith to pay. LOANS. - In v-1r:1at cone ~::rns J.oans, there we.s formerly, and is today, an excec;s of usur:;ir, whict i.s a rreat hindrance to baptism aG wolJ. as to confession; for it turns out in tho sam0 way as I lwve showed in the case of the one under jurlgment, who giv00 half of his cultivated landu and profits u:i.1til he po.ys the debt. 'l'he debtor 5.s conderm10d to a life of toil; and thus borrowars become slaves, and after the death of the father the children pay the debt. Not doing so, double the amount must be paid. system should and can be reformed. This -128INHERITANCE,- As for inheritances, the legitimate children of a father and ~other inherited equally, except in case where tho father and mothor showed a slight partiality by such gifts as two or three gold taels, or perhaps a jewel, When the parents gave a dowry to any son, and, when in order t.o marry him to 0. c.hi8f' s daughter, the dowry was greater than ths sum ;;:ben the other sons, the excess was not count0d in the whole property to be divided, But any other thin~ that should have beon ,given to any son, t:-·"ou.gh it mi,a;ht be for some necessity, was taken into consideration at the tillie of the partition of the property, unloos the parents should declare that such a besto~al was made outside of the inheritance, If ono had had children by tv10 or more le:?;itin:ate wivGs, each child re8eived th0 inheritance and dowry of his mother, with its increase, and ~hot share of his fathor 1 s estate which fell to hir:r:. out of the whole, If a ~:an h1:.1d a child by one of his slaves, as well as legitimnto children, tho former hc:1.d no s!·1.bre in the 5.nheritc:nco; bu-:. tb.e legitimate children were bound to i'rc.,e the rr,other, ~ • ,.., t' • an d t ogive n1rn somo~n1ng - a +~no~l or a s~ave, 11 ne father were a chief; or if, finally, c:-myti:-d.ny, eJ.se were !!iv:::m it wets "by the unani:::1ol;.s consei1'r, of all. If be;ides his le~i~imate children, he had 21s0 some sons by a free unmarried woman,l5 to w11orn a dm,;ry was given but was not consider8~ as a renl wife, all these 1AJere clc1;s.,sed as natural r~hi.ldren, ,:l1though the child ::,y the unmari"ied woman should l1D.ve been begotten after Lis m&rriage. Such childrun diG not inherit equ2lly with the lcg~_timut0 c:h:i.lcJ.r0:;:J., but only th:) thh"d part. For example, if t;1(n-·e /JGi.-·C:: two children, the legitimate one h8d two parts, and the one of the _in_t12 §..~.:suil 6 one part. V/ben thero ·were no 1 • ' l ' ------15 - It must be rl:ir:.1embel"C!d t.hDt tJ10 ma:1arli:-::a.:; co11ld have concubi:1es who werG the frse vwmen, to whom this statement refel's. 16 - Inuasava, who was taken for a wife, that is con- cubine. -129- children by a legitimate wife, but only children by an unmarried. 1,,1oman, or inaa sava, thE· la tte:r inherited all. If ho had a child by a slave woman, that child received his shart as above stated. If there were no lE)gitirnate or natural child,. or a child by an j.rnlc.l§.cLYJ-l, whether there wets a_ son of a slave woman or not, -~be inheritnnce went only to the father or grandparents, btothGrs, or nearest rolotives of thE.: doccaser,i, who gB.·10 to the slavc-ch::iJ.d as above stated. CHILDREN BORN IN ADULTER~.... In the cuse of a child by n free married woman, born •:1r.d.lo she 1:Ju.S married, j_f the husband pur.ish(:)d the adulterer this was considered a dowry; and the child entored. w:i th the others into partition in the ini1eritanc0, His share equa1ed the part left by th.s father, nothing more. If there were no other sons than he, the children and the nearest relatives ihherited egually with him. But if the adulterer were not punished by the husband of the '\r.JOman who had th8 child, the latter was not considered as his child, nor did he inherit anything. It should be no.tic J 1l that the offendor wns not considered 6ishonored by th0 punishment inflicted, nor d:Ld the hu,sbDrcd : . eave the woman. By the punishment, of the fat her t~ie child was fit.tingly made l8gitirriate. ADOPTED CHILDREN. - Adopted children, of ·whom ther·e aro many arnont:: them, inherit the double of ' what was paid for their adoption. For e:;~pn,plo ~ if on13 gold ta8l. 1,va13 ~iven that he might be ac!opted when the firl3t father died, tho child wao givon ( in inheri tanr::cd two ta ;:;~U;. But if this cL.ild should die fj_:i:•f:t, his cj:iild.r8n do nut inhe1;it from the second father, for the arrangement stops at that point. This is the danger to which his· money i3 exposed, as well as his b8:i.rig protectud as a chiJcL On this account this manner of ndoption common among them is considered lnwful. DOWRIES,- Dowries c:ro given by thcJ wen to the women's parEmt;:;. If tl'1e latter a.cr3 liv::i.nf, they enjoy the use of it. At, their dea·~~11, provided ·the dowry has not beon consumed, it ic divided -130like the r0st of the e,state, equally arnong the children l:!XCePt in case the father t3hould cc:.re to bes tow s~mething ctdditional upon the do.ught::. c:r, If tLe vvife, at the time of her marr5.age, bas neither father, mother, nor grandparents, shs cnjoyc her dowry - which, in such o case, belongs to other rel:::i.t:Lve or child, It should be noticed t}1at unmarried women can own no propert;, in lnnd or dowry, fo~ thu rasult of all their labors accrues to their parents.17 In the casB of a divorce before the birth of children, if "'.:.he v:~fe left the husb·.:md for t.he purpose of marryin1:; another, all her dowry and an equal additional amount fell to tho husband; but if she left him, and did not marry an:Jth(3r? tho dowry was retur:nr:.)d, When ·i:,he husband left l:us vJife, ho Jost the ho.lf of the dcwry, an1 the other half was returned to him. If he oassesaed chi:dren at the time of his divorce, the-whole dowry and the fine went to the children, and was held for thcin by their grandparents or otl"ier responsibJ.e rGJ.atives. I have also seen another practice in tv:o villages. In one case, upon the d0uth of the wife who in a year's ti1nr:3 had borne no chi:ic~rc3n, th,) parents returned one-half the do\'1/rJ to the h~1uband vJhose wife had died. In the other c.:.:.r:::o, upon t.hc1 dC;.1th of the husband, one-half the dovvry war, ret~.u·ned to the relatives of the husband. I have a,sc8..:'tf:.iined that.this is not; a ser.eral practice; for U),)On in17 - In Tagalog the dowry is cc:,11 ed bi 6 ay-kaya. No~ body has yet gi VEm the etymolof:/ of this word :.:.n a satisfac· tory manner, .for k::ry-L{ just 1 Lrn t ingi, h.:1s no L1caninc now in Tago.log that might e:::plain the sense which was given to -~t. Kaya meant wenlth, fortune, meEming which kaya in l\.'ialay still proservos. So th:tt bigay ( to give) v.nited with kaya, explai:1ed clenrly vJhat vrnt~ to be given. 'I'he dowry was determined by tho v::i.1·cnt,3 of t J:1'?. gi.rJ, according to their position and prcrcerwions. .vJorcov:Jr thoy took into account, in fixing the amount, the pnnhiri1ayat 11 which llad to be paid to thu mothor of the ,:•irl for the labors o.nd watchfuli1ess incident to the bring:Lnr.; up of the daughter, and the pasoso, which must be paid to the chichiva, or the nurse who has cared for her • 11 $an Antonio Croni__ ca.:2., otc. 1, page 168. -131quiry I learned that when this is done it is done thn.1 piety, and that all do not do it • .MARRIAGE CONTRACT. - In the mattr1r of mar- riage dowries which fathers bestow upon their sons when they are about to be married, anJ talf of which is 6 iven :i.mmediatcly, oven whe~1 they are onJ.y cl1ildren, theY-'e i,s a great deal n,.of.'r:; corn~lcxii:,y. Tl1Gro is a fine stipulated in thG contract, tha~ he who violates it shall pay a certain sum which vuries according to the practice of the village und the affluence of the individual. ThG fine was heaviest if, upon the death oZ the paronts, tho son or daughter should be unwilling to marry becaur::;e it had been arran6 ed by h:i.s or her parents. In this case the dowry which t,he :par~nts- had ruceived wa,s returr,.ed and nothing rnore. B'..lt if the parun.ts were living, they paid the fine, because it had been assumed that it had been their design to separate the children. The above is what I have been able to ascertain clearlv concerning the customs obs3rved amonrr. those r.a t:l. vss in all this Laguna and the tingues, and amor:g tl10 entire T.1gc1.lo r2cG. 'l'he old men say that a dato who c:id anytl1iLg contrary to this would not be esteemed; and, in rolating tyrannies which they had con-:.mitted, some conc:.emned them and adjudged them wickGdi -132- Francisco Colin, a member of the Jesuit Order, arrived in the Philippines in June, 1626, He was a man of · scholarly interests and attainments and endowed with cuperior talents. He was at first assigned to teach in ,. the Jesuit College of San Ignacio in I"'faniJ.a. Later, he was made rector of the Colegio Seminario de San Jose, For some time, too, he served as provincial of the Jesuits in the Philippines. He spent the last years of his life as a missionary in San Pedro Macati where he died May 16, 1660. As a historian, Father (!oJin is best kno1tm for his work, kabor Evangelica, a record of the missionnry activities of the Society of Jesus in the Philippines. Th0 work is a valuable source of information on the civ:.Uiz:1.tion, in its various phasos, of the pre-Spanish Philippiaes, as well as of the Philippinos of his own time_- In the pre- paration of this work, Father Colin mad3 extensive use of the work of a fellow Jesuit, Pedro Chirino, _w 1~10 ca:·ne to the Philippines in 1590. Father Chirino's work, R0laciog de las Islas Filipinas, like the L(tl:?_or Evjlngel:tcg,, is an account of the work of the Jssuits in the Philippines, was published in Rome in 1604. The origi.nal edition of Labor Evanr:i:elicn. was pub- It -133lished in 1663. The work was reprinted in 1900 under the editorship of Pablo Pastells, S.J. The Pastells edition is a notable work of scholarship and is a valuable contribution to the literature of Philippine history. from the copious notes made by the editor, it cont~ins numerous reprints of rare historical documents. . Following are portions of Father Colin' s !,p.b9r Evc1.n1 l g,:Ll.£.i!• Physical Features and Characteristics of the Filipinos The ordinary stature of these Indians is medium, but they are well built and good-looking, both rr.en and "i'Jomen. 'l'he~r complexion is yell :Jwish iJro-wn, like a boiled quince, and the beard is sligbt. The Tagulogs wear the hnir hanging to the shoulders; th2 Cagayans lbnger and hangin~ over the shoulders; the Ilocans shorter, and the Visayans still shorter, for they cut it round in the mariner of the old-time cues of Espana. The nation called Zambals wo:1r it shaved f~om the front hal1 of the haad, while on the skull they have a great shock of looso hair. The com1Jloxion of tho womon in all the islmlds differs little from that of the men, except amonr:; the Visnyans where some of tr1e womon are li:;ht-com-· plexioned.. Al.l of the women :-rnc. r ·!..:.ho ha:Lr tied up in a knot on top of the head with a tasteful ribbon. Both men and women, uni vorsall y, conc.::idor it e s~wntial that the hair should bEi vm·y black and well carod for. For that purpose they use lotions mnde of certain treo-barks and oils, prepared 1:Jith mnsk and other perfmllf!S. Their gre,,-ite,st anxiety and 1 1 - B. b~ R., vol. l+O, pp. 60-~69. the 14th chapter of Labor Ev:J.n,cr cl icG_. 'rhey form part of -134care was the mouth, and from infancy they polished e.nd filed the tc)eth so thnt they might be even and pretty. They coverod thorn with a coatin~ of black ink or varnish which aided in preserving them. Among tho influerrtial people, esp6cially tho women, it WclS the custom to set some of the teeth most skillfully with gold which could not fall out, nnd gave a beautiful appearance, Th0 men did not glory in their mustaches or beards, bnt quite the; contrcry; and consequently they pulled. th::.,rn out on purpose. And just as it is an amusement or custom of some of ·, 'h P• us tJo gnaw our ~1nger-na1_s, ~.ey ge~. amusemen~··-·in pulling out the hairs of the beard with certain littlE: bits o.f cleft bamboo ( cnfiuelns hendid.as) or wit11 little shells j_n the form of' pincers. All the women, and in some places the men, adorn the ears with large rinzs or circlets of gold, for that purpose piercing them ut 2n early aee. Among the women the more thr) ear.s were stretched and opened, so much'greater lt!as -~h8 beauty. Some had t·wo holes in ench enr for two kinds of earrings, some being larger than others. Clothing and Adornments The men adorned tho hGad with only Q_~nq_§,1_ or long a.nd narro"vv thin cloth, with which they bound the forehead and tern~?les, and wi'lich they cnll .9.52,J:,ong. It was put on in dif?erent raodes, now in the r,Ioorish manner like a turban v1ithout a bonnet, and now twisted and wrupped about ths; hoad like tl-it0 crown of a hat. Those who were esteemed as valiant let the elaborately worked ends of the cloth f~ll down upon their shoulders, and these were oo long that they reached tho le,'s~,. By the color of tho cloth thGy ,. .,,. . ran:.<:, 1 . was t 1·1e .oaog:e ,., cnsp ..l o.ye d ·011e1r cd'1 d it 01 t11<:!lr deeds and 8Xploits; and it was not allowed to any one to use the red notonr!'. until he h3.d at lenst killod one person. In ord8r to wear it embr'o:i.d.e:rod with c erta~1: bo:::,ders, v:hich were 1 iko a crown, they must have KJ.lled seven. The per:::.onal clothing of those men was a small garment or short loose jacket (charnarrcta) of fine linen which barel:7 reached tho waist. It had no collar r.md wc: .s fittE'id formerly _with short fJleeves. Amon:; the chiefs thosrc) jackets 1,1ere of a scarlet color, Et11d vvcre rw1cle of f'ino Indian mus·· l 1 • -135lin. For breeches they wore a richly colored clothed, which ,,.irrn p: enerall y edged with !~olc1, et bout the waist and brought up between tho legs, so that the J.egs wore decently covered to the middlo of the thigh; from there down feet and logs were bare. 'Jhc chic:)f a dornmcnts con,sistecl of orr..mnonts · and jewel8 of gold and precious stones, They had various kind:.~ o.f nec::laces, and chc1::i.ns; brn.ccluts or wristlets, ulso of gold and ivory, on the arms a,s high .as the ulbovJ; whilc:J some h::u.l strings of corneliann, agat0s, and oth0r stones which aro highly esteemed r:.1mon 1:i; thorn.· On th,;; lcn;s, j_nsto&d of gurters, they wear sornc strinf s r)f th1:J same stones, ,n1d certain cordr3 of m:.u1y s~1·rmds, dyed black, The fingers of the hand &re cover0d with n:any rings of gold and pr0c iou;::: st0nr-:.::;. ~f.1Le f :i.nal complement of\ the gala att:Lre WDS like our sas 11, a fine bit of colored cloth crouted over the shoulder, the Gnds joined under th2 b.rm, which they affocted greatly. Instead of that tha Visayans wore .s. robe (ma1'lotr1.) or jacket (pag1!QTQ) made without a collar and rea.ching quite dovm to the feet, and ombroidered in colors. The entire dress, in fine, was in the Moorish style, and was truly ricli :and cay; and oven today th!?Y c:1.f.fect. j_t. The dre3S of tliB women, bcsidG,S the small shirt wit:.h sleeves ,1lready mentioned, whJ.ch wa::. shorter for them, far thGir gala dress had littlo modesty, was a skirt GS wide at top as at bottom, which thoy gathered into folds at the waist, allowing the folds all to drop to one side. ThiJ was long enough to cover them even to their feat, and v.ias g\:merally white. v,b.en they wunt outsido thG house thev wore for a cloak certai~ colored short cloaks,· those of th(; principa.l wonw11 bcin::i; of crimson s E.k or other cloth;.1, ernbroiderud wit,h d ao.orrrn · d w.1t'1 ' l ri,::n ' ' f r1n5~0. '' r t,, ' go 7.. u1 an, DU., L;ueir principal gala attiru consistJd in jewels and ornaJ1ents o~ gold c:1t1d ston0s v1d:ii0,}1 thr3f vrnar in thGir e1:l:"'/J, and on ·~he nock, thr, fingers of the hand 2nd the wrists of the arms. B\lt; no";J they havu be·Y.un to woai"' the 3,ittnish clot.h,Js· a;1ct orn·1~· rnents, 11.amely, chains, n;3e1':.la1;0:::,, :3ki.rtcj,, shoe.s, and rnantiJ..las, or bl-cJ.ck veils. 1.1 !-...8 LHTj wear hats, short jackc:>.ts (rQl?X1J2 s,), breeches, c1nd sl"i? os. . 0 nt]y ..... r,c,e,~1t· drc·,,,. of tlj(' IncJ·1'rnS 711 Cons 0v:,ou t:.. _ J the· ,... .::D .l .. ,w .,.t u ..,,UiJ , .., ... 1, .J •. . -,C.. ... .,_ -136these regions is now almost Snanish. Tattooing Besides the exterior clothing and dross some of these nations wore another inside dress, which could not be removed c::.ftsr it 1i\1.:H, once pu-1~ on. Thes0 are/ the ·ca.ttooings of tb,:: body so •(:;:'c)a.tly practiced among the Visayans, whom we c~ll Pintados for that reason, For it 1A1c1s a custom among them, and was a mark of nobility and b nrJ(;:cy, to tattoo tho whole body from top to toe when they were of an age and strength sufficient to endure th3 tortures of the tattoing, 'IJIJh:i.ch was done (after being carefully designed by the artists, and in accordance with the proportion of the parts of the body and the sex) with instruments like brusht'\· 1· r.;' ~ ,,.1-: t 1. , ·,1 (' ry f ·l,,., "-' DO ·i 1--1+V S O J..r., b "n1e u"' or cma] boo. Thu body v;,rn pric:.ced and rnarke:d with them until blood was drawn, Unon that a black nowder or soot made fron pitch, ;;hich novcr faded~, was r,ut on. The whole ~Jody wns not tattoed at one time, but it was done gradually, In olden times no tattooinQ was be~ufi until some brave dGed had been pcrforn1ed; ::cr1c('-:1fter t.hat' for each one o.f the parts of the body which was tattood even their chins and c1 bou-'.; the eyes t3o that they appeared to be masked. Children were not tattouct, and the ~orren ocly on one hand and part of the othor. 'l':he :aocanos in this island of [/Inrdln also ,00.ttoed ther1u0l V8S but not to the sr::me e:1:tent us the Visayans. The dress of both men ~nd womon among the Ilocanos is almost alike in that prov~nce. Thus far the dress. We shall rtow ~ay somewhat of the food and their customs in eating. U,\ ,. .1·· 1 'V ,.:::'-·' . .. L .;.,.- 0 _.. . .. ....1...LJ.~ J.: .-- Cl,J.~ Foods and Beverages Their usual sustenan~e is as stated above, rice, well hulled. and cleAned, ;_rn.d b,YLJ.ed orily with 1•1ater, which is Cc)lled n1ori2ouetn by tlrn s,aniardc, as if to cetll it 11 f'ood of the !Jj.oore.• 11 The rncat :LG that of a small fish 111lt:i.eh :i.s ln.ckin<s j_n no part. That i:::- 0L10 boilec in wat·~r, and vdth tbe broth from it they give a flavor to the morisqueta, ior lack of -137rice and fish they use the herbs and many kinds of native potatoes, and fruits, by which they are sustained well enough. At their banquets they add venison, pork, or bfJef, which they like best v1hen it has begun to spoil, and to smell bad. Their manner of eating is, to be seated on the ground. Their to.bles are sn:all &nd low, round or square, and they have no table cloths or napkins; b1i.t thf; pla-+:-,es w:Lth tht=J food are placed on tho same tables. 'Ibey e&t in co1:1panies of four which is as many as can get around a sw~ll table. On the occasion of a wedding or a funeral, or similar feasts, the ~hole house will be filled with tables and guests. ~he food is placed all together on Various plates. The people do not shun all reaching out to the s8me plate, or drinking from tho same cup. They relish salt, D.nd salty and acic1. foods. They have no botter cJ.a.irr-ty for the sick than vinegar and green or pickl0d fruits. Thay eat sparingly but drink often; one:l whou they are 5.nvited to a banquet, they are asked not to eat but to drink. They waste much time in both oatiYJ½ and drinking. When they have enough an.d are drunk, the tc1bles are taken awa1 and the house is clecred. If the banquet is tho occasion of a feast, they sing, play, and dance. They spend a day and a ni1)1t in this, amid great racket and cries, until thoy fall with weariness and sleep. But rarely do they become furious or even foolish; on the c~Jntrary, after they haVC:i ta}am wino they preserve due respect and discraet.bohavior. They only wax more cheerful, and converse better and say some witr,y things; and it is well known t:1at no one of them, when he leaves a banquet, althou.•:?)1 it ~Ji:) at . ' ' . "+- 'GO ' h' any nour o.f t_h G ni'.6r1t, ,f ai·1 s to go s-crE1J.Q:,L , is own house. Ancd if he: has occa.sion to buy or sell, . ' go ld• or e1iv0r . .. . 'ne does ., j and to exRc.ne and weiga 1't with so great steadiness that the hand do,::1.s not 1 tremble, nor does he make any E~rror :in tho weight. Th0 wine con'.monly used among ti1crn is either that made from palms, as it is throu~hout India, or from sugar-cane, which they call Q.'d.il~,· 'l'he latter is made by e::tractin:; the sap :f:rorn tl10 cancis, and then ~ringing it to a boil over the fire, so that it becomes like red wine, although it does not taste so good. ':i.lic palm -,-Jine is made by extracting the sap or liquor from whlch the fruit was to ba formed. For as soon as the palm be?ins to send out -138tbe ~~hort from the snd of the twig, and be.fore the flower is unfolded,. that flowor-stoc~ is cut, and a bit of bamboo is fastened to it and is tied to tho stalk or shoot. Since the sap naturally flows to that part, os in·the pruned vino, ~11 the sap that was to be converted into fruit, flows into that bamboo, and pasi:.;es tr1rough it to vess r1ls, where, somewhat sour and st8cped with bark of cettain trees which give it color, teat, and bite, they use it as a comraon drink and caJ.l it tuba., B1l't the real and proper palm-wine it) made from the same liquor before it turns sour, by distillin 6 it in an almnbic in ovc.ms tbat they h8.ve prE~parGd for it. They give it a greater or less strengthi as they please; and they get a brandy as clear as water, althou~h it is not so hot (as our brandy) .2 It is of~ dry quality, and, when used with moderation, it is considered even outside Filipinas as healthful and medicinal for the stomach and a preventive of watery humors and colds. The Visayans also make a wine, called pafig2si, from rice. Tho method of making it ~s to place in the bottom of a jar or ordinary size (whi9h is gonerally of two or throe arrobas, ~ith them) a quantity of yeast m&de from rice flour and a certain plant. Atop of that tLey put GJ.ean :rice until th u jar j_s half fuJl. T11en wat(ff is add,)d to it, and, after it has s~ood for.a few days, it, is fermentod by the fo:cce of the )Tcest, and is converted into the s~rongest kind of wir:e, whic11 :Ls not liquid, but tLic:c lik3 .c:achar}. In order to drink it they po~r water into the jer. It is a cause for surprise that even though wr1tcr b,3 pourud in a2;ain and again, the liquor is pure and liquid 1,,-1tne, nntil the strength vanishes and is lost, and then they lGave it for thu children. The method o:f drinking 2 - "Such is the wine from nipa called Tc1:ndq_Q,Y. The famous chemist (a Chinese mesti~oi Anacleto del Rosario, discover~d a process by which the disa~reeablc taste of this brandy disappears; anct it becomes e;ual to that of Spain in col or, smell, test e, and stren5th. 17 ( Father Pastells, in his edition of Colin, i,. p. 62, note 2.) B. & R. . -139it is with a tubo, which they insert clear to the bottom where thc yeast is. They use three or four of those tubes, according to the number of the persons who can find room around the vessel. They stuck as much as they wish, and then give place to others.3 Songs, Donces Musical Instruments The banqu0ts arc int orspersed with :.:;ing ing, in which ine or two sing and thu othBrs respond. 'I'he songs:+ are usually their old songs and fables, as i,s usual wit1-1 other natiuns. The dances of men and women are generally performGd to the sound of bells which arc made in their style like basins, large or small, of metal, and the sounds are brought out quickly and unint0rruptedly. For the dance is warlike and passionato, but it has steps and measured changes, and interposed ore some elevations that really enrapture and surprise. They generally hold in the hands a towel, or a spear and shield, 3nd wi~h one and the other they make their gestures in tiwo, which are full of meaning. At other times with the hands 0rnpty they make movsmcmts wr:ich correspond to the movem;mts of the f eot, now slow, now rapid. Now they attack and r0tiru; now they incite; now thoy pacify; now they come close; now they go away; all the grace and elegance, so much, in fact, that at times they have ~ot been judg2d urnvorthy to accompany emd sol,}mniz e our ChrL3tian fcasts,5 However, the children C;nd youths ________ , 3 - Among the Igorot~ of Northern Luzon, this drink 'I'he yeast used to ferment it is mad,:; o.f rice flour and thTL~ of a plant known, among the Ilocano s, as buca c:o.o. \. is widely used, bei:-1p; called by them binubuC::.an. 4 - 11 The:Lr most popular traditional songs are the Q.'b!,ll.cli,_mau, the C9_g;,12-1:::.cJ1l, the BaJj.tQQ, the '.Ja,l.orn:t, and the 1-'alinrl.ao. Some o.re only snng; in oth,:::rs, they ::3inr; and dance at the same time." (Pastolls, in hi13 Colin, i, p. 63, n9te I. B. L E.. 5 - "The dance here rtescribed by the author is that which is calll:~d in Filipinas M_q_z:2-Mo.L.Q.•l' (Pastolls, u~ supra, p. 63, Note J.) B. & n. -140- now dance, play, and sing in our manner and so well that we cannot do it better. They had a Lind of guitar which was called which had t1-w or more copper strings. Although its music is not very artistic or fine, it does not fail to be agreeable, specially to them. They play it with a quill, with great liveliness and skill, It is a f' act tha.t, by playing it alone, they carry on a conversation and make understood whatever they wish to say. £Q.l:Y§.tl, All of these islanders are extremely fond of the water for bathing purposes, and as a consequence they try to settle on the shores of rivers or creeks, for the more they are in the water the better they like it. They bathe at all times, for plea~ure and cleanliness. When an infant is born, it is put into the river and bathed in cold water; and the mother, after having given birth, does not keep away from the water. The manner of bathing is, to stnnd with the body contracted and almost seated, with the water up to the throat. The most usual and general hour is at sunseti when the people leave work or return from the fie ct, and bathe for rest and coolness. Men and woman all swim like fish, and as if born and reared in the water. Each house has avessel of water at the door. Whenever any one goes up to the house, vJhether an inmate of it or not, he takes water frou that vessel to wash his feet, especially whEm it is muddy. That is done very easily; one foot is dried with the other, and the water falls down below, for the floor there is like a close grating, Speaking of the religious beliefs and practices of .I the Filipinos, Colin in the same ace.cunt, ~abC2.£_Evangeli.£§., says: l 1 - Ibig., pp, 69-82 being portions of the 15th chap~ tet of the L~bor Evangelica. -141- It is not found that these nations had anything written a})out their religion or about their government, or of their old-time history. All that we have been able to learn has been handed down from father to son in tradition, and is preserved in their customs; and in some songs that they retain in their memory and repeat when they go on the sea, sung to the time of their rowing and in their merrymakings, feasts, and funerals, and even in tteir work, when many of them work together. In those songs are recounted the fabulous genealogies and vain deeds of their gods. Among their gods is one who is the chief and superior to all the others, whom the Tagalogs c&ll p~:!,_!?_gJa Mev~aEal,2 which signifies 11 God" the "Creatorir or 0 1viakcr". The Visayans call him La..QQ, which denotes "antiquity". They adored (as did the Egyptians) animals and birds; and the sun and moon, as did the Assyrians. 2 - Pastells discusses the meaning of the word Bathala; - he thinks that it is ascertained "bv resolving the word into its primary elements, ~%ta and Ala = 'Son God, or Son of God'. This is why the first missionaries did not deprive the natives of this name when they instructed th$m about the existence of God a~d the mysteries of the Trinity, the incarnation,. and redemption, as states an anonymous but very circumstantial relation written at Manila on April 20, 1572. This is more evident in tb e song which the Mand2yan baylans used in their sacrifices, when they chant the M;i.m_insad. The Iv'iandayas believe that Man.silatan is the fat her of Batla ( ~ being a prefix -which indicates paternity, being, or dominion), and the Busao who takes possession of the baylanas when they tremble, and of the Baganis when they become furious; it is a power which is derived from Mansilatan ••.• This interpretation of the word Bathala is confirmed by that word of the Visayans, Qiuata; we always find here the same idea signified in the wo~ds Diw~ and ~~tq, differing only in their transposition •••• In closing, we may note that Dtwa in Malay, De'i§: in Javanese; §_u_n_qg, Makasar, and Day (akTT, Dev~ in M...aguindanao, and Qj_eba.!§. in Bornean, signify 'the supreme God', or "Divinity," --- B. & R. -142- They also attributed to the rainbow its kind of divinity. The Tagalogs worshiped a blue bird as large as a ~urtl e-dove, ~hich they called t ~g~;3-m_<;1-nt1g1,l~!;l, to which they attributed the name of .u2.coa1a., wnich, as above stated, was among them a n~rne for_divinity. They worshiped the crow, as the ancients did the god Pan or the goddess Ceres, ar_d called it IJiovlu-qa, signifying "master of the earth~ 1' 'I'h<Jy held the crocodile in the grea~est veneratio~, and when they saw it in the water cried out, in all subjection, "Hano," signifying "Grandfatherir. They asked it pleasantly and tenderly riot to harm them, and for tho.t purpose offered it a portion of what they carried in their boat, by thrmving it into the 1c,1at er. 'I'lnre was no old tree to which they did not attribute divine honors, and it was a sacrilege to think of cutting it under any consideration. Even the very rocks, crags, reefs, and points along the seashore and rivers were adored, and an offering made to them on passing, by stopping there and placing the offering upon the rock or reef. The river of Ivianila had a rock that served as an idol. of that wretched people for many years, and its scandal lasted and it gave rise to many evils, until the f&thers of St. Augustine, who were near there., broke it 1 through their holy zeal, into small bits and set up a cross in its place. Today there is an image of Et~ Nicholas of Tolentino in that place, in a small shrine or chapel o Tulfhen sailing to the isla.nd o:z.' Pa.nay, one saw on tne point, called Nasso, n8ar Pot.al, a rock upon which were dishes and othar pi?ccs of cook:ery-ware, 1J11hich were offered to it b'/ those who went on the sea. In the island of Mind::i.nao, 'between La Caldera and the river, there is a great point of land, on a rough and very hig~ coast. The sea is forever dashing against these headlands, and it is difficult and dangerous to double ther:i, r,'Jhen the people passed by that one, as it was so high, they offered it arrows, which they shot at the cliff itself with so great force that they st,1c:{ there, off erin,g_, them as if inm sacri.f ice so that it would allow thGm to pass. lhere -were so raany of these arrows th~t, although the Spaniards set fire to them and burned a countless number of ther:1 in hatred of so cursed a superstition, many rem3.ined there, and the number increased in less than one year to more -143than four thousand. They also adored private idols, 1Jbich each one inherited from his ancestors. The Visayans called them _gj.vata, and the Tagalogs@j.to, Of these idols some had jurisdiction over the m0untains and open country, and perr;1ission ·:tJas as.teed f rorn them to go thither. Others had jurisdiction over the sowed fields, and the fields were co!JlI11ended to them so that they might prove fruitful; and besides the sacrifices they placed articles of food in, the fields for the anij:,.9_§.. to eat, in order to place tnem under greater obligations. There was an g_gitQ of the sea, to w horn they commended their fisheries and navigations; an anito of the house, whose favor they implored whenever an infant was born, and when it was suckled and the breast offered to it. They placed their ancestors, the invocation of whom was the first thing in all their work and dangers, among these anitos. In mer~ry of their ancestors they kept certain very small and very badly made idols of stone, wood, gold, or ivory, called licpa or lgraV.§,ll• Among their gods they reckoned also all those who perished by the sword, or who were devoured by crocodiles, as well as those killed by lightning. They thought that t,he souls of such irmnediately ascended to the blest abode by means of the rainbow, called by them oalan2:ci9. Generally, whoever could succeed in it at~ributed divinity to his aged father at his death~ The aged themselves died in thnt presumptiwus del '1sion, and. during their s ic~mess and at their death gaided all their actions with what they imagined a divine g!'c1vity and manner. Consequently, they chose as the place for their grave sone assigned spot, like one old man who lived on the seacoast between Dulac and Abuyog, which is in the island of Leyte. He ordered hirnoelf placed there in his coffin (as was done) in a house standing alone and distant from the settlement, in order that he might be recognized as a god of navigators, who were to commend thernsel ves to him·. Another had himself buried in certain lands in the mountains of Antipolo, and through reverence to hin. no one dared to cul tivate those lands (for t~ey feared ~hat he who should so would die), until an evc-1,ngelical minister removed that fear from them, and now they cultivate them -144without harm or fear. Thev mentioned the creation of the world, the beginning-of the human race, th8 flood, glory, p~nishment, and other invisible things, such as evil spirits and devils. They recognized the latter to be man's enemy, and her.ce feared them. By the beginning which they assigned to the world and the human race, will be soen the ~anity of their belief, and that it is all lies and fables. They say that the world began ~ith only the siy and water, between which was a kite. Tired of flying and not having any place whe1·e it could alighs, the kite stirred up the water a[ainst the sky. The sky, 'in oruer to restrain the water and prevent it' from r,L)Lirtin½ to it, burdened it with islands; and also ordered tte kite to light and build i-ss nest on them, ancl leave them in peace. ?hey said that men had come from the stem of a large bamboo ( such as one sees in this 0-rient), w11ich had on~-Y two nod,.,1les. That bamboo, floating on tl:e vrnter, ·1rns carried by the waves to the feet of the kite, which was on the seacoast. The kite, in anger at what hac, st:'.'"_lck its feet, opened tne bamboo by picking it with its beak, When it was openPd, out of one no~ule came ~an and from the other woman. Aft er varicus cl.if i':lcul ties because of the obstacle of consanguinity in the first degree, one of the gods nar:.:ely, the earthquake, a:ter consulting Witt the fish and bJ_rds, absolved them, and they married and had :-na.iiy children, Fro1a those children ea.me the vario·J.s kinds and classes of people. For it happened that the pa.rr:mts, angered at h&ving so many ci'iildren idle and useless in the :O.ouse, .took counsel to:<;other; afterv·Jard the father one day gave wa:r to his, anger, and was desirous of punish!ng them with a stick which he had in his hand (a thing which they never do}. The children fled, so that some of them took refuge in the chambers and innerrr..ost parts of the house, from whor:1 they say ct:me the chiefs j oth'3rs escaped outside, and from them came the freemen, whom they call timauas; others fled. to the kitchen and lower parts-;and They are t,he slaves; others fled to various distant places, and they are the other nations. -145It is not known whether there was any temple) in all these islands, or any place assigned in common for worship, or that the people ever assembled for public functions. In private they were wont to ha."e in their own houses (and not ou.tsJ.de them in any cavo or like place) so~2 ~inct of altars, on which tlwy :'.)leced tl1eir :,;.c.olr1j and before them a small brE,sier with burn:Ln~: a:ror:_at,ics. But a:i"chough they had no temples, they .d!icl not lack p:c:Lests or priestesses for ~he sacrifice, which each onG offered for his own purpose or nccess~ty. The Tagalogs ~alled those cursed ministers cat8lonan, and the Visayans L8ba·~~n. Some were priestt ~y interitance and relatio:1sbip; oth3rs by the dexterity with which they cause,i_ them~3el ves to be ins-1:.ructed E..tnd substituted in the office of femo 11s priests by gaining their goodwill. Others were deceived by the devil with his wonted w:.I.J.es, and made a pa.et l:Jith i1:-1.m to· assist them, £.nd to hold C'.)nverse with him through their idols or a:1j.tos; &nd he appeared to them in vnrious forms. The method of making the sacrifices hinged on the different purp-oses for -,vhich tl1t~Y were intended. I~ it ~ere for a feast of os~entation and vanity that was being ~ade to some chie~, they cc.lled it 11 thc feast of the grc1t god.,;, T:ie method of celebrating it was nea~ tLe ~0use of th0 chief, in a J.ea~y bo;er which th~y er3c~ed especially fo:;:, that pur:JoSc"l, hung round abcut w:Lth iian1;ings • .h • f as·1J.o:i.1, l ' ., , 71,1 • in ti._l.eJ_l' name.qr, tJrn JJ1oor:.;.sn, ,,,ric,'1 v.'ere lnf' de l rom odcis and ends of piec 3,s, of Y,irii<LlS co lors. The guests assori1bled there, and tte i::icriCE:S :1Rving been prepared (on these oc8ario··,1s of a feast ueual}_y some ~ooc. fat pig), the cecta:!..ona ordered the 2irl of the best upnearence ~nd who was best aJorn~d to give the spc~r-ttru3t to the animal, amidsi. t1-ie ceremony of ccrtair;. d::mces 0:: theirs. When tLe an:i_rna1 wHs ddFid it, was r:ut i 11to b :i.ts and divided amo1~ all the people, as is the blessed bread. Althou~h othar animals wore kiJled and oaten, and other viands and ref~:--eshmcnts :)ec;u.liar 1 3 - nrrhe :Mahornctans lanr:a" (Pa~te11°) Lt>ca~rn:i tfiets have/' no-· ( ;·eli~iou~) temples nor idols, nor do • , (IVToi.'G~,) had their mosque, or says (Vol. III, p. 60): 11 'fhe healai-J at all; th0y h:1ve neither they offer any sacrid.ces.--B. & R. -14-6to these people were used, thnt animal was the.one esteemed and was reverently consuMed. The chief p~trt of the feast was t,he drinking, accompanied, us ever, with much music and dancing. It r,~mains fo :c us to so E:)ak of the:Lr mortt:.ary cnstoms. As soon as t;.-1n r-ic°>: person dL)S, they be[!in to bm,va:Ll him with sots :~Le: Gries - not or.ly the ;2latives and ffiencis, but a!s0 those who have that ;J.S a trade and. hire thel't1selves 0 1t for that purpose. They put into thei.r so:r..g innumerab~_e bits of nonSf:mse in pr~1ise of the rloceas1::id. To the: sound of that Bad ruusic, they washed the body. They perfumed it wi~n storax, or benzoin, aEd other perfumes, obtain8d froril trce-re:,i.ns which ar·e :found throu~nout thGse forest~;~ Havin::i: do:r.e that -t:,hey 1 3hrouaed the corp3e, wrappinp 'it-in a greater or less numbr::;r of cloths, according to the rank of the deceased. The most 1)o't1erfuJ. were a no:i_nt od and emb:::ln,ed according tc the manner of the Hobrmvs, with aromatic liqu0rs w].-dc£1 preserve tho bouy from corruption, especially that lliade from the nloes wood, or as it is callP.d, ea_:;le-wood. That wood is much esteemed &nd Ere~tly used tnroughout thls Indiu e:;~tra Gar:_ge"."!1. The sap from tr.e ')lent c:'.lled "au.yo Twflich-is the fa:nous o'etril of Gll~ Inciiu) 1,1as nl~30 used for- that :r-urpose. A quantity of thQt sap was placed in the mouth so that it wouln react the interior. The grave of poor peopl9 w&s a hole in the ground under their own houses. Aft;~:r tha rich and po~0rful were bewailed for three day8, they W8re pl,qced ir1 a box or coffin of fa1cor:::·uptible wood, the ~oJy ado~ned with rich jewels, 2nd w:th sh0cts of gold over tte mouth and eves. Tte box of cofftn ""as c1ll of one pi0::cG, and was gc'!nera].ly d11f~ out of the trun~ of a larze tree, and the lid was so adjusted that no air could enter. Ey such moans some bodies have beeri found uncorrupted after the lapse of many years. These coffins were placed in one.:: of three r.ilacen, ,:;.ccording to thE: inc:.ina-t:,ion and co~nand of the deceasetj. That place was either in the upper part of tho house with the jewels, which a~e generally kept there; or in the lower part of it, raisec1 up from the i-;::..~ound; or in the r;round itself, in ~n open hole ~nich iG surroundod with a small railin's, wit 11out covering the coffin over with e3rth. Near it they gGnerally placed anothef box -11+7filled with tlw best clothi.ng of the deconsed, cmd at suitable times v~rious kinds of food were vlaced on dishes for them, Beside the men were placed the weapons, and beside the women-their looms or other instrum~_mts of labor. If they were much beloved by those who,bew~iled them, they were not permitted to go alone. A good meal ~as given to some slave, male or f emal 8, and onr:.: of those rnost liked by the deceased; and then he was killed, in order that he might accompany t:1e d ece&sed. Shortly ~JeforG the entrance of the faith into the is7.und of Bool, one of the chiefs of tl-,c:1t i:,land i·:iad hir.;.self buriod in +• • L t' • ] l .oc.r&n.i::iay, • d o··f ooav, a .kin w11ic1j_ .,i10. n:.-:1t1ves ea_ surrounded o y 2 evr:n1ty sloves with orms, an1rnunition, 1 and food - just as he >;vas want to 0 o out upon his raids and ~obbcries whon in life; Dnd aa if he were to be as great a pirate in the other life as in this. Others buried their d9ad in the open country, and made firet3 for many days under the house, and set guards so that the deceased should not return to_ carr:;r away those 1'Jho had rf:;mained.. After the funeral the lamen~ations cea8od, although the 0ating and drunkenness did not. On the contrary, the latter continued for a gr0ater or less time, according to the rank of the aece~scd. The widow or widower ~nd the orphans, and other r8la1 as . ., ~·ivec ''/1,.,0 1·' ,-y,E, v1no'"'t- ar"·r='ect- l., (J. by t; crr•i' ccf f',-.c.-il °v ' -·· 1 1 7 -i " d ,. ··t . ., f,,, · rq ·" "l' .,,.: '"'h u"'nd S~.gn Q __ IT'.OUJ'.lL.ng, L,n aus a1.1.ec1 ... 0 ,_ l.J..8u 1, .L..~.:,.' otbcr ,:-,ood p•:,ti"1"' c1urin.cr tho ·r, davc.· na11c1-t but ve·--b geta~le~, and those only sparingly, That manner of ~acting or nsnitence for the dead is ca:lcd sioa 1'"0;1rnJ' ,--·].. L.:..;"-' 7'J'7~· b v tl,.,·:,'···r-,aaal l1V c·--- Qn'S i. • v .. ... 1···0' le::.: aY\'lonP' ,-.:!:;, t.,.'t1·e· T') r'.t..;:.)c~ ..l...:, bJ_ack, i:-inci aritong the Visayans white, and in adcdtiion the Visc1yans shave the htiad and. eyebrovH··J. At tl1e death of a ~hief silence must regin in the village until the interdict was raised;. and that lasted a greater or less nur:1ber of dc1ys, accordi.np: to his U - ~ ..; • V l;.., ••, I. .i:> - '1 V1 . \::) ' ' ., .:.! J - J. ~) J - .!.. . . C-' V 0 , C\ U V V -..:., :,..l 1:.l .,, ..1.. ' J. .. , q . ~-; . J.·.t - . 0 . U ~ -· .,: U . l·1 r0nk. During that time no S()un.d or no~:_sc was to be heard anywhore, under pennlty of in:'.:'a.rr~y. In rogurd to this even the villa~es along tho river-bank placed 3 certain signal aloft, so that no one might sail by th3t side, or enter or leave tho village, under r~nalty of death. They deprived anyone who broke that silence of his life, with t~e greatest cruelty and violence. Those who were killed in war were celebrated in their lamentations and in -148their .funeral rites, and much time was spent in offering sacrifi.ces to or for them, accor.1panied with m3ny banquets, and drunken revsls, If the dGath had happened through violence-- in war or pe,·ce, by treason, or any other manner - the mourning was not :aid aside nor tlrn iYJ.·I, c;rcict l'aised until the children, brother~, or relatives 1 killed crn 8gual nw:nber not only of -i.~hsir enemies and the murderers, but 3.lso of any s·':.ran?;e persons who were not their frionds. Like· hi~hway . ·men and robbers they prowled on land and se3, anJ ~ent on tho hunt for men, killin~ as many a3 they could until their fury wa.s appeased. That barbarous kind of VGl".geance is called ~nlata a~d in token of it th8 neck was girt with which was worn until the number of persons prescribed had been killed. Then a great feast and banquet was nade, the interdict ~as ,raised, nnd at its proper time the mourning was removed. In all the above are clearly seen the traces of heathendom &nd of thos~ anci0nt rites and customs so celebrated and noised about by good aQthors~ by which many other nations, more civilized, were considered as famous and worthy of history. a.strap Of the systems of writing, languages 2nd civilities of the Filipinos, the same author makes the following ob- . 1 servat1.ons: From the ::ihc..1pe, nwnber, and use of the char~cters and letters of tLis nation it ia auitc evident that they 2rc all taken from the l,foro Iv[e:l&ys and originuted from the Arabs. The vnvrnl J.E.itters are only three in number, but they S(:;I'.7e for five in their use; for the s0cond and third ~re indifferently 8, i, y, o, and u, according LLS is required by the meanin1 or sens8 of the word which is apoken or written, 1 - I'g_iti•, pp, 4fi"'."60, being; portions of the 13th chapter of Colin' s 1abor Evan.!cI.2.+Jcg. -149'rlH:1 consonants are thirteen in number, and serve (except at the beginning of the phrase or initial letter) as consonant and vowel; for the letter alone, without a dot above or below, is pronounced with 11 A 11 , If a do~ be placed above, the consonant ~s pronouncE)d with 11 e" or "i". If the dot be placed below, it is pronounced with "o" or "un. Thus the "B" with tne dot above is pronoi__mceJ "bi 11 or 11 be", nnd with the ciot below, 11 bo" or "bu". For example, in order to say 11 camai1 (i.e., bed) the two 1 ett ers 11 CII and "Iv'11 1 are sufficient without a dot. I If a dot be placed above the "C" it will be 11 quema 11 11 co mo 11 (i.e., 11 f:l.:ce 11 , ) If dots be placed below each, it will be ( i • e • , n as n ) , The final consonants are supplied in all express ions. Thus in order to say 11 cnntara (i.e., 11 to sing 11 }, one wr:Ltes 11 catan, only a 11 ca and n, 11 T11 To say 11 barba 11 (beardn), two 1tB1 sn G.re f3U.:'ficiont. • ':Jith all the supplements, ho who reads in that langu.:ige will, if hG be skilful, havo no trouble in pronouncin: the words or phrases correctly bv substitutinr,: the letters that must oo ::::ubstit;1ted ,'.1ccording to the s0nse. But since that 21ways occasions difficulty, those who k~ow our characters are studying how to write tht.dr O'\!D lanp'.uage in these. All of. them have now ado:rted our wny of writing, ·with tho lines from 1 e~'.:t to righ'.:.; for formerly they only wrote verticallJ cow~ and up, ·plac1'nr• the 1.".,J.·1,s+ l ·J..~[ t-o tr1'" 1 "'f·I:, c1nrl [' 11 Iffil1"" the o'chE:rs continu.ously to the right, just opposi~;e to the ChineSEi and tTapanese, who althougi:1 they write in vertical up and down J.inas, continue tte page from th,J rip;ht to the lf::ft. All tlw,t points to a great antiquity; for running the lirn-:l from the • {:} J' - V •·- 11" ..,._, V '.J ..!- V ' ., ,.,. • '· 0 right to the left is in accordance with the present 1 -150- and general style of the Hebrews; und the style of runnin;-:i: the lines vertically fron: the top to the bottom7 is that of the o1dest nation of the Chinesei..vhich doubtless greatly resembles. the rnothod of the Hebrews, whose chnrc.cters have much resemblance to thej_rs. Those of the iforo Arabs resemble those of the Syrians, Diodorus Siculus, who wrote iq-the time of the Ntperor Caesar Au1rustus, in making mention of an island which luy in our middle re~ion, or torrid zone (wh:l.ther Iamblicus the Greek vrnnt in the course of lds :3.dv2nt ures), says that they do not write horizontally as we do, but from top to bottom in a stra5.fht line; and thc.t they use charc-iC!tdrs which, although few in number, ma.lee up in their USE' for man1, for· ee.ch one 2-w::: four different transformations. Consequently, one may see thut that method of writing, and tlrn chur'acters of those nations, are very old. Beforj they knew anything about paper (and even yet they do in places where they cannot get it}, those p•2ople wrote on bamboos or on palmleaves, using as a pen the point of a knife or other bit of iron, with which they engraved.the letters on the smooth side of the bamboo. If they write on palm-leaves they fold and then seal the t ter wh en writven, . +• . 1 _t..e J.n our rnann,3r. T.hey .:Ll.. .....7 c1 ing fondly to their own method of writing and re3ding. There is scarcely a man, and still less a woman, who doGs not know and pra et ice th,'..1t me':;_:·tod, even those who are already Christi~ns in matters of devotion. For from the sermons which thoy he8r, and the histories and live3 of the s3ints, and the prayers and poems on divine matters, composod by themselves (they have 2lso some perfect poets in their rn,:tnner, who translate elegantly :i.nto the::.r language any Spanish comedy), they use small boois and prayerbooks in their lnngua 0 e, and manu~-cri:p~cs 1vhich are in great num:Jer; as is aI'f'irrned in his manuscript history by F2.ther Pedro Ch::Lrj_no, to whom the provisor and vicar-genernl of this .cn·chb:Lshopric entrusted 'the visit and examination of those books in the year one thousand six hundred and nine, for t~e purpose o:c' prlJVentinp; errors. That was a holy proceeding, anC ono that was very proper among so new Christians. -151,! The Fil:tp'inos· easily accustom themselves to the Spanish letters and method of writine. They are greatly benefited thereby, for m~ny of them write now just like us, because of their cleverness and quickness in _j_mitating any letter or design, and in the doing ot anything with the hands. There are some of them who commonly serve as clerlrn in the public accountancies and secretaryships of the kingdom. We have known sofue so capable that they have deserved to become officials in those posts. amd perhaps to supply those offiCGS ad mterin1. They also are a great help to students in making clean copies of their rough drafts, not only in Romance but also in Latin, for there are already some of them who have learned that language. Finally, they are the printers in the two printing-houses in this city of Manila; and they are entirely competent in that work, in which their skill and ability are very evident. Coming now to the other point, that of their languages, there are many of these. For in this island of Manila alone there are six of them, which correspond to the number of the provinces or _civilized nations; the Tagalog, Parnpanga, Ca111:1-rines ( or Visayan), Cagayan, and those of tha Ilocans and Pangasinans. These are the civilized nations, We do not yet know the number of the nations of the Negrillos, Zambals, and other mountain 11-?.t ions. Although the civilized languages are, strictly speaking, dissimilar, they resemble one another, so that in a short time those people can understand one another, and those of the one nation can converse with those of another - in the same way as the Tuscan, Lombard, and Sicilian, in Italia; and the Castilian, Portuguese, and language of Valencia in Espana. The reason why these law;uages resemble one another so closely is the same as in Italia and Espana, For as the latter lan~uages originated from the Roman, just so do these orirdnate from the M.-11ay. For proof of that it is i1ecessary to do nothing else than to compare the words and idioms, or the modes of speech, of each one of these languages with the Malay, as will be seen in the following table, in whicn is made the comparison of the three most important languages, th~ Tagalog, Visayan, and Pam~ panga. Since for the sake of brevity the comparison -152- is made in a few words, whoever is interested can with but sli~:ht :Labor extend the comparison through many words. cieJ.o(i,e.,sky) langriet so 1 ( i • e • , sun ) mate: ari 1 una ( i • e • , moon } oulcrn1 Tasralog Paffil?.8.ngQ Visuau lanngit arao banon aldao bulan laguit arlao bulan Bouan Of these lan~uages the two most general are the Tagalog' which is llS ed through the g l'eat er part of the coast and intarior of the isJ.and of Iv:fanila, and the islands of Lubang and Mindoro; Rnd the VisG.yan, which is spoken througl1out a11 t~1e isl,snds of Pinta.dos~ Of the two without doubt the most courteous, grave, artistic, and elegRnt is the Tagalog, fo~ it shares in four qualities of the four greatest languages in the world, . l T~avin, +- • , • ",T • t} name 1 y, IJ.eb rew, ,,-,uree,r, an d 0pan:i,_s,1, ~~1 1 t'ne Hebrew, besides the resemblance already noted in the mann0r of its vowels and consonants, it hc:s the roots of the vocables and their hidden a:::1d obscure meaning ( sus prenezes, y mister:i.os) and_ sorn0 zutturals; with the Greek, tho articles in the declension of nouns, and in the conjugations the abundance of voices and moods; with the Latin, the abundance and elegance; with the Spanish, the fine structu~:--e, polish, c.nd courtesy. • • • Among the u.ncivj_lized nations, o.lthoue:h the people are fewer, the lang'..lages a:..,e mo:.... e; for almost every river has its ovm :Cc..n2:ua;..::e. In 1\tLnd.oro ( and the same v'1il1 he true oi othe~-~ (~isti'~_cts more remote) we saw the b:irbaroi.,w r·:a.nr:uianJs a.:,3cH,:b1in.0: from places bnt lit·0J.e distant fro;n EJac~1 other,~ who did not understand one unother. 'l1lwy vnre so barbarous that they had never seen & Spanish face. The things sent them to attr2ct them wer·8 hawkr f'-belJs, nails, needles, and other s :i.i/ilar thi11gs. '1.'hey thought · that the i,,ounds of the harp ::ri.1d guitr.,.r ·;,vere human voices. When u niirror was heid up b,~fo:c!:J t-hem, they exhibited sinzular effects, in one of fear and in another of joy. T~1e la cJc of civil i ~c1tion Dnd corn-: munication is tbe :ceE1son for the 1n 1ltiplicity of. languages. For just as in the pri;:nit.ive multiplication of languages which toolc pJ.ac(3 in the tmrnr of Babel, the docto1~s observe that the languages 1,. ' 1 -153equaled the number of :families o.f the descendarits of Noah, so amonz the barbarouD nations ench one lives to itself alone wi~h.out any recognition o1 or subjection to public laws-. They are always having petty wnrs and dissensions amon~ themselves; and, since the; lack cornII1unic:.rt.ion, they forget the comn1on langunge, ,::.md each one has so corrupted its own language thE1t it cannot understand the othurs. We .observed in soma districts thGt ono language was spoken at the rr;.outh of a river and another one at its source. That is a great hindrance to the conversion and instr~ction of those peoples. The polish and c0urtesy, especinl~y of the Tagalogs and those near them, in speech and writing are the same as those of very civilized nations. They never say 11 tuif (i.e., "thou a) or spE)ak in the second person, singular or plural, but always in the third person: , thui;!, ) 11 Tl1e chief would. like this or that. 11 Especially a woman when addressing a nan, even thoush they be equal and of the middle class, never say :;..ess than i1Sirn or nrvbuter, ;, and that after every wcrdl ,i;;t,en I v'llc.l.G comlnt, sir, up the rive:r·, I 3ff\iJ, sj_r, ,3t e. n In w:,:'::_ting they mc..1ke constrmt u.se of very LLne and delicato c:;~0 I.... ren"""'~ ..,n d 1--,V e"c:l ll.Ll.,..L-: e·-'0 c..~ n·.a' co·· 1J1··+L"> .,_, • pres S].•• on"' J.:0 . 1...-!VU.,,\ 0 d.L \.'l' Their m&nner of salutation ;-JhE::n L,hey me-c one C:i.nother 1°1as the removal of the P,o·:9J}l::, 1'1hich is a cloth like a crown, worn aa we wear tho tat. When an inferior addressed one of higier-r1nk, the courtesy used by hi:·11 t:a::: to inclir.;e hir D')dy J.ow, and then lift one or- toth hands to t11P fac0, to 11eh the cheeks vdtl1 it, ::rnd at tl:.e sc%e t.:5.rne r·-d.se 0118 of the feet in the air by doublin~ tLe knee, anct thon seating oneself. The method of doin~ j t was to fix the sole of the feot firruly, and 1ouble both knees, without touching the ground, kJn~inz the body upright and the face raised. 'I'h0:r bent in this m2nner witr1 tl-:e hec_d uncova:i'cd ::1;1:..~ the p.9.~9J1g_ thrown over the left shouldel' like a r,,.;v'cl; they had to wait until they were auastianed, for it would be oad breeding - to say anyth:Lrns until a question was asked. C-1..., 'Cl The method of giving names was the following. As soon as a child was born, it was the mother's -154business to name it. Generaliy the occasion or motive of the name was taken from some one of the circumstances which occ~rred at the time. For example, Maliuag_, which means "difficult, n because of the difficulty of the birth; Malacas, which signifies 11 strong 11 , for it is thought. that. the infant will be stronr:. 'i'his is liko the custom of the Hebrew~, as a~penrs fro@ Holy Writ. At other times the name was given without any hidden meanin::':, from the first thing that struck the fancy, as Daan, which signifies 11 road", and Da~!£, signifying ngrass 11 • They were called by those names, without the use of any surname, until they were married. Then the first son or daughter gave the surname to the parents, as Amani Maliua.!!., Jnani r::al~.§.i. 11 the father of r-~aliuag, n 11 the mothel" of MalacaE:; 17 • The names of women are differentiated from those of men by adding the syllable •·1 in 11 , as Ilog, "rivern; Si 1log, the name of a E1al e; Si lloguin, the name of a f emale. They used very tender diminutives for the children, in our mcmner. Among tlrnmsel ves they had certain domestic and delicate appellations of va:.~ious sort::3 for the different degrees of relationship - as ,that of 2 child for his father and mother, and vice versa. In the same way (they have appellations, for their ancestors, descendants, and collaterals. This shows the abundance, elegance, and courtesy of this language. It is a general thing in all these nations not to llave special family names which are perpetuated to their successors, but·each individual has the sin~le name that is given him at birth. At present this name serves as surname, and the peculiar name is the Christian name of Juan or Pedro which is imposed at baptism. However, there are now mothers so Christian and civilized that they will not assign any socular name to their children until tlF~ Christian name has been given In boptism, and then the surname is added, al though it ha.:3 alrr;ady been chosen after consultation with the parents and relatives. In place of our 11 Don 11 ( which indeed has been cwsigned to them as much abuse as among ours el vos), in some districts they formerly placed before th~ir names, Lacan or Gat: as the I-Ioluccans use Cachil, the Africans MulC:D::, the Turks Sultc:ill, etc.--The 11 Donn of the ,1omen is not Lac an or Gat, hut r1Dayang, D2yang I,fati, Dayan,,:,: Sanr,:uy~ i.e., aflona Mutia, HDona Sanguy 11 • -155There is g e1v:1r2l distaste among our Tago.logs to mention one ::mo::;r:ie:r Clrnong themselves by th2ir own names alone, without adding something which smells of courtesy. When th0y are asked by the Spaniards "Who is So-and-so?" and they cannot avoid naming hi:r..t by his ovm name, they do it. with a certain shamefacednesf., and urnbarrcssr'1crnt. Inasmuch ar: the rnDthod of namiEg one is fithe fr,ther of So-and-so, 11 as soon as he has children, rrn· him v1ho lwd no children (among persons of influence}, his relatives and acquainttmces ;;ssemhled at n 1:),::tnquet, and gave hi.ma new narno there, which +,lie.:,y designatc)d as Pamngat. That w2s usually a nam.e of excell0ncc~ by some circumlocution or metaphor, 'uased on the:l.r own old name. Th~s if one was called by his own name, B~cal, which- sign:ifie,s irironH the now nane gj_ven h:1.00~1ld be Iirrintci.n.3.es,:,ri, s~gnifying •1not to spoil with time~ 11 If' it wer:) BavJ.ni, ,,1hicl: signifies 11 valiant. 11 and spir:i.te.d, 11 -he \/JEJ.0 caJ.1eC: !J:.Elal_g_nitan "he to whom no onu is bold." It is also tl1e custom among these natior:s to call or:.e nnother ·among thems~lves, by way of frienrlship, by certain correlative names hased on some special circums- -tance. Thus if one had givon a br~nch of swuet b&s il to another, the t1.i·JO-~ among therr~s elves cr1.lled each other Casolasi, the name of the thine given; or Caytlog, he ~ho ~te an o~ an egr with another. This ::Ls in the rnFJ.Lnei-· of the namut; of f.'ullow-students ur chums, as used by us. These are all ~rg~ments in f~vor of the civilization of these Indians. Concerning the pcli tical and social insti-~utions among the Pilipinos, .. their government, their ln1:rn, the administrati~n of justice, their marriage custornu, inheritance laws, slavery, 0tc. -' Colin in the same work ~ . . 1 ma k es t h e toll owing o b servation.s: l - Ib.ig_., pp. E:52-93 being part~:i of tho 16th chapter of Colin' s 1.§Qqr EVfil!fJJJJc:1, · -156There were no kint".S or rulers worthy of mention, throughout this a~chipelago; but there were many chiefs who doHinated otl-1ers 1 ess powerful. As there were many without much power, th(ffB was no security from the continual wars that were waged between them. :Manila had two chiefs, uncle and nephew, who had equal power and authority. They were at war with another chief, who was chief alone; and he was so near that tbey were separated from one. another by nothing more than n not very wide river. The same conditions ruled in all the rest of the island, and of even the whole archipelago, until the entrance of the faith, when they were civen peace - which they now nst.eem much more than all that they then obtained from those petty wars and their depredations. They were divided into barangays, as Ror~ into districts, and our cities into parishes or colJ.ntions. They are called barangays, which is the name of a boat, preserving the name from the boat in which they came to settle these islands. 3ince they came subject to one leader in their barffngay, 1vho acted as their captain or pilot - who was accompanied by his children, relatives,. friends, and comrades - .1fter landing, they kept in company under that leader, who is the dat~. Seizing the lands, they began to cultivate them and to make use of them. They seized as much of the sea and near-by rivers as they could preserve and defend from any other barangay, or from many baran-gays, according as they had settled near or far from others. Although on all occasions some barangays aided and protected others, yet the slave or even the timau§!_ or freemen could not pass from one barangay to another, especially a married man or a married woman, without payin~ a certain quantity of gold, and ·giving a publ:ic feast to his whole barangay; where this was not done, it was an occasion for war between the two barangays. If a man of one barangay happened to marry a woman of another, the children had to be divided between the barangays, in the scJ.me manner as the slaves. Their laws and policy, which were not very barbarous for barbarians, consisted wholly of traditions and customs, observed with so great exactness that it was not considered possible to break them in any c ircimstance. One was the res_pr;ct o.f parents und eldors, carried to so great a decree that not 8Ven the nume of one's f8ther co~ld pass the lips, in the same way as the Hebrews (recorded) the name of God. The individuals, even the children, must foJ.:low the ;;i:enoro.l (custom). Thero were other laws aloe. For tEa deter~ination of their suits, . . .. t,,.1j e:r.>c was no o th.er :JU . dge nc, crimim:1..1, than t~10 sa:id chief, w:i.th trn ass:l.stanc:e of some old men of the saLle barGru 1 ay. With them tha suit was determined in the folioiving form. They had the opponents summoned, and ondea70I'(-';d to ha.vc them come to an agreement. But if.' thay would not agree, tl:wn an oath was administered to each one, to the effect that he would abide by what was determined and done. Then they called for witnesse1::-: J and examined summarily. If trie proof was equal lOn both sides), the ,oo tl,., 1! ci. VJ_· 1· ;:i, difference was given in favor of the one who pcnquered, If the one who was defeat~d resisted, the judge made hi~self a party to the cause, and all of them at once &ttu~ked with the armed hand the one defeated, and execution to the requirod amount was levied upon. him. The judge received tL.(:, larrcr share of this amount, an.d. some was pairi to the witnesses of the 011(:l who won too suit, whiJ. o the poor litigant received the least. In criminal causes there were wide distinctions mc:ide bocause of t,hc rant of the murderer and thu slain; nnd if the latter were a chief all his kinsme;1 ·went to hunt for the murderer etnd his reluti ves, anJ toth sides engngE:d in war, unt:iJ. mediators undertook to declare the quantity of gold duo for that murdor, in accordance with the appraisals to their custon. One half of that amount belonged to t~u chiefs, and the other hali ~a3 divided el1·7 l (iI"AJ''. rq1<·l re"I .'-''tl' ·n,:,·~ of '--1-1(;· d'·"a F·on-r tl"'J. c w·1 f·'o• ceased. 'fiw ponn~_ty· o:;:' deT~h w1.~J nevGr imposed by proc css of law, cxc ::ipt wh r-;r; thu murderer o.ncJ. his v:i.ctirn were coLi,10:1 rr:.en e.nd :1r1d no ,u:old to satisfy tht-) murder. In Gt ch ,J case, if tEc m,m' s ~ti!:::9.. or rra~inco (for these are one and the saffie) d~d not-kI:.1 him, the other chiefs did, spearing him after lashing him to a stake. .. .1 .t.:.::.::; i,,,:;; .J..._ ' .J • • • .L....._. ~ ...,, . _ ' C:t..,. .; _ .. ~A 'V' ...., ~.) • U , 1 In a matter of theft, if the crime were proved, but not the criminal, and more than one V -158person was suspected, a canonical clearance from guilt ha cl to be made in the following form, First they obliged each pbrson to put in a heap a bundle of cloth, leaves, or anything olso that they Wished, in VJ hich they r:ti.;,:ht discover the article stolon. If the article stolen waF found in t~e heap, at the end of thio effort, then the suit coased; if not, one of three r~thods was tried. First, they W8re placed in the part of t~e river whore it is deepest, each one wi.th his wooden spoar in hi3 hand. Then at the same time they wore all to bo plur~ed under the water, for all are equal in this, and he who came out first vrns regarded ai;i the criminal. Consequently, many l.ot therr.so:l.ves drown for feur of punishment. T11.e second was to place n stom, in a vessel of boiling water, and to order them to take it out. He who refused to put his hand into the water paid the pe~alty for the theft. ~hirdly, each ono was given a wax cand1 e o.f the sarno ·,dck, and of equal size .:tnd wc:dg:ht. 'I'ho candles were lighted at thE:; same time, and he whost:, cc:mdle first went out was the culprit. There ~re throe kinds and classes of people: chiofs, whom the Visc:i.yan~3 call gato nnd tho Tagalogs maginoo; tho timo.uas, who are the ordinnry common people, called muharlica among the Tag,s.lo(l;S; and the slavos, called oripuen by the Visoyans and alipin by the Tagalogs. The last are divided into several kinds, as we shall relate soon. The chiefs attain that position gen8rally through their blood; or, if not that, because of their energy and strength, For even thout;h ono r1,ay be of low extraction, i.f he is seen to bi:, carei\1-l, anc.i if ho gains some WeDlth by his industry and schemes - whether by farilling and stock-raising, or by trQding; or by any of the trades amonJ them, r::uch ar. smith, jcwel(3r, or carpenter; or by robb0ry and tyranny, which ·wc:S the most usual method - in -~hut w2y he g:: ins 8uthority and reputation, and increases it the more he practices tyranny ;:;ncl v:i.olenc e. With these bcg:innj_ngs, ~he t2,k0s the nun~e of .9.::1to_; and others, whether his relatives or not, come to him, and add credit and estuem to him, and rnnke him a leader. Thus there is no superior who E:ives him authorit~y or ·title, beyond his own efforts nnd power. Conse~uently, might was proclaimed as right, and he whci robbed most and tyrannized most was the most powerful. the If his childrcm continued those t yro.nr..ies, they conserved that grandeur. If on tnc; contrary, they were men of little ability, who allowed themselves to be subjugated, or wers reduced ,either by misfortunes and disastrous ha~pnnings, or by sicknesses and losses, they lost their zrandeur with their possessions, as is custom:.:;ry throughout ·::,.he world; and the fact tho::it thoy had b.onorc::d pe,rents or relatives was of no ava~l to them, or is of no avail to them now. In thj_s wo.y it h&s happened that the fqthcr might be &.. ~i-1:i_ef t and the son or brother o. slave - and worse, oven a slave to his own brother. Their manner of life and ordinnry conduct from . , , is • +-..,ra d e, in • :u". l sor"s t: "' • by t .ne d,ays o i~ O.ia OJ.,.. ,c111ngs wholesale, a11rl. more by retc:::il in the products of the enrth, in accordance with ¼hat is produced in each district. The niaritirne peoples are great. fis-I-1ers with net, line, and coral, Th~ people who livG inland and (:XC(:3~lerrt farmers and hunte:,:,s. ':'hey are always cultivatin~ rice, besides other vegetables and garden products, quite different from those of Europa, The women also are shrewd in trading, especially of their wec:ving, needls work, and. emoroiderios, which they muke very n2atly; dnd there is scarcely one who cannot read and write. Sometimes tho husband and wife go together on their trading, and, whether for this or for any other thing, she must always go ahead; for it is not their custom to go together. Even if it be a band wholly made up of men or of -worn(m, or of mon and women mixed, and even if' the road be very wide, they go in si n,e:J G file one after the other. .1. In thEi celebration of their marriages, espousals, and divorces, and in tho giving and r~ceiving of dowries, they also proceeded acc,ording to reason. , In the first place, they agreed as to the dowrv, which is nromised and given evan Tl,.,now by "+ the mo.n, in the sum nar:i.ed by the parentr,. vu.'.en ~v is determined the betrothal takes place, gancraliy with a conventional pene.lty whir-h i C\ :rigorously E:xecutcd. However, neith2r men nor wori1en tcJ.ke it for an insult o• ~riove greatly if the betrothal be refused, bet~use then thoy benefit by·t~e fine. The truth is, that if those who are bouna by • ~ · T -160the fine were the parents, after their deaths the children are free to break the contract without incurring the penalty; by only the restitution of the amount received as dowry. Mntrimony at present includes, beside,s the above, the delivery of tht~ person and thu do.vry. The lattAr is not recei•rud by the -woriian but by hor parents or relatives, as it ~ere se~lin~ tteir girls, in the manner of the Aasopot~Mians and other nations. The parents conver·t:, the dmvrJ into their own 'estate, and it is distributed. with other property, at their deaths, among all the children equally. But if the son-in-law has been very obedient to his parents-in-law, then the latter eenerally return the dowry to their children. The other relatives are only depositaries of what they must again d:3.liver to tho children. Be:3ides the dowry, the cI1iefs formerly gave some pre.sents to th8 parents and relatives, and even to the slaves, to a greo.ter or loss amount according to the rank of the bridegroom, . The pagan ceremony and form of marriage had to be authorized by a s,':i.crifice; for aft or tho marriage had been agreed upon a~d th9 dowry paid over, the catRlona came, and a hog was brought to her. The cerernoniGs were performed as in other sacrifices. The lovers having seated themselves in their bridal chamb or, each in the lap of an o1 d woman who acted as godmother, the latter gave them to eat from one plate and to drink from ono cup. The bridegroom said tht:it, he took the woman to wife, and, accepting her, the cat2 lonQ or Q!i,QE!.Yl.fil:ba immediately gave them a thousand benedictions, saying to them: "Moy you be ·well mated. Yiay you hcget many children and rrandchildren, al.l rich and brave, 11 and otlrnr things of this sort. Thereupon the hog was slain, and the lovers were married; and whon the others bocame tired of dancirn; and ,3ingin,'3, all became intoxicated and went to sleep. If tho recently-married couple did not suit ea.eh other, another sacrifice was ordered, in which the bridegroom himself danced and slew the victim -- the ~hile talking to hie illJ.:i.tg_, and offering himself to it for the sake of peace and harmony with his vvi.fe • That hav:Lng beun clone, he calmed himself, confident that then and thcmceforth the two would J.ive in harmony, and onjoy thoir married life in peace. These nations consider it irnportnnt to take a wife only froN thoir own family, and the nearer the b(3tter. Onl:, they expoct th._3 fi.r:.3t grade (oI' kinship), for thuy c.d.1Jays consicl0red thet as a dissolving impediment. But ·\1'1h::tt mc=u·Tia.:;es were those in which the contract 1:rns not indisso::..uble, and co0ld be dissolved by the woman, if she were to blame, merely returning the dowryl If the husband were to blame, i~ was not returned; and the marriage could be repudiated by thems,alves, without any solemnity of law. That was done da~ly for very slight cau.s es, and new marriages wo:ro forued w::.th others. Polygamy was not ~ho fashion among the Tagalogo. However, if tho wife bore no childron,. the husband could with his wife's permission hav~ them by his slave women, in o.ccordhnce with the example of the ancient patriarchs. Arnonp; the principal Visayans, the ministers of the gospel found established.the custom of hnving tvw or more legitimate v1ives;, o.nd large dowries, w~ich was a great obstacle to uhristianity. Thus far in regard to rnarriace, As to the children and their succession and inheritance, if they were legitimate they :inherited equally in the property of their parents, For lack o: legitimate children th0 nearest relatives inherited, If there were illeg;j.tj_mate children, who had for exarni')le been had by a frecwoman, they had their share in the inheritance, but not GqualJ.y with the lGgitirncte children, fQr tho latter received two-third3, and the illegitimate or,e-·third. But if there were no legitir1i1:tte child:cer1 t11on the illGP;itimut(; received all the inheritance. ~he children of a slave worn~n w:10 belonged to the man ·wore e;iven some po.rt of the housohold effects, according to the will of the legitimat0 chj_ldron. In addition the mother became free for the very re,'.'1.:son that h(';)r master had had a child by her. There were ulso adopted children, and the pt act ice was that the one· adopt eel bo ui;ht his adoption. For the natural pc1rEmt gave a c e:rtr:i in ~rnri1 to the -162-. @dopt ed pare~1t in orcl er to have his son or daughter ndo;':)tE:d, and tJ.1crcupon th'3 J.attur vJas ac.opted without any other ·subtlety of low or of pDternal powor. It was done onl:;r 'to t!1e encl that the adopted child, if he should out--li7e th8 one adopting him, should inherit do-:.1bl e the sum hu cl J een given • .. f or 111s aao:pc::i.on, .1.1:.us, J.·f +-.,un ·wer8 6 1,ven, 110 m•1st inherit ·twenty. But i.': the ac:op-:, ed raront outlivGd the aoopt.:;d child, ~~he ado}:.-ition expired as well a2 the ri:?;ht o:f :Lnhe:c:i.tc:incG, wh:Lch was not given to the heirs of tho adopted one, either ~n whole or in pe.r·t. Eut if, on tho c.:orri:,r.:.::ry, the parent uj.ed wril,3 his 0·11n chilc. w,1;:, liv:i.ng:, h0 left him by way of addition to thJ sum for adoption doubled, soine jewel or r-3lave woman, as a rE:;Wai'd .for hi:::; good services. But, on the other k1nc', if the ch::.ld. wa·s ungrateful and acted badly, t~1e adoptive parent gave :1iDi up, by restoring the S'.D1 that had b8en given for his adoption, 1,. • • ' • r,1,.. • Arl.ultery was r.ot pPnishnd corporally, hut by a pecuniary fire. T.her(::1for13 the adulte::."'er, by paying to the aggrie·1ed party th8 sum of isold agreed upon between ttem, or given by the sentence and judgment of the old ri:en, was pardoned .fo::." the injury that ho had corrm:itted; and trw aggrieved party was satisfied, an6 h~s honor was not bes~irchod. Also he continued to l :t ve v:ith his wife '\Iv ithout anything more ::>eing suiC:: 0:::1 the subject. !1ut thlJrrn cl1j~ldren had by a marr~ed woL~~ did not suscced to the nobility oi' the :rx::re~1ts or to thcd.r Driviler-~t)R; but where alwc1ys reckoned j_)J.(3bei;:ms, wi:1om t~1ose .90.ople call ti~auas. Likewise those children had bv a slave w'o'r.ien-,-&lthough they WGro .freu, as "''8.S t,be mother, were always regarded as of low birth. ?hose "\IJho succeeded to t~1e nobility were the L:w;:Ltimate ch::.1dren. In the baraneay, when the f2ther was lord of it his eldest son inherited that orfice; but, if he died, then ho who came next in ordur, · If there were no male chiJ.dren, t.hcn the d8u[.1:htr3:i_ sue c 8eded in the same order; ancl for want of e:~ tr: er rilD.l es or females, th:::: succession went· to t:iR neurust rolative of the last i)osse,ssor. Tl1us no wiJ.l was necessary for all these: sucGessions; for wills wer(~ never in vogue.: amon,e: these nations in the: form and solemnity of such. As for left-scies it. w:1s sufficient to leave them oponly, in writing or entrusted by 0 [, -163word of mouth, in the prosenco of known persons. A great part of the we3lth of theso Indians consistod in slaves. For, a~tor gold, nu propArty was held in p;reater estc~r:m, ueceuscJ of t11ci rnan:' comforts that 1·:cr·3 cnj )f()d for their ruode of living through a multitudo of fllavef;. Thus our 8pa:1inrds whon. they ence1·ed tl1e island:3 found so 1w:1.ny :::J.c1.vcs that there were chiefs ·who h::id on0, tvv'J, Dnd ·three hunc:red sla-v83, and those gene~rally of tl1Fd.r uwn coJ..or and ncJ.tion, and not of other :foreign nations, Tho most general ori~in of thos0 s~averieo WGro int(JrPst and usury. 'l t:,1t wes S<.:1 rcuch r,r.c.tc+:.iced cmontr therr., th,-=it no fatho1· ·.,-;,)uld o.id his t>or, no son his father, no brcthor !:iis brother, and muc11 less any rolc:.tiv,~ his relative, even thou;~h hi;=., de:r·o snl'fering extrome necessity, without an agreemen.t to rest~re double. If payme1:it w2.s not madf.:: 1,ihon p:co:mJ.scd, the d";btor rcDDJ.ned a oJ.ave tmtil he prt:.i.d, 'fhat happen,3d often, for the in.tere:::t o:c increase continued to :,cc'...l.Lr._:J.ato ,iust :.10 long as the payment wus deferred. ConBcauently, the interes~ exceeded the wealth of the debtor, a::1d therefore the dBbt was loaded upon i1i,s shou::..ctcrs, and the i-)oor crc2,ture b0come a slavr;; ard. from that tim(3 his children and descend3nts were slaves. Other slaveries W8re dl;le to. tyramry and cru01ty: Fo1; s=..aves vrnre madu either in vengeance on onE.:rnes, in -cl:e enc:agements and petty ware that they wagGd against one another, in wh:Lch tl:i.e prisoners made'! re:.:112.ined .sl,:t'V8S, 'JVen t.1-1ough they wore o.{:' the sc:me v~_llago ond race; or c:s a punishment which the more nc,we:rful inflict,3d on the weaker ones, even for ti, matter of J_.ittl0 i.m1.-- • t' t, • 1.1:.,.,. port encc), o:i..,:> w1uc:1 ·ney r:ia,,:e o. rr!a-·:-,er o:t:n ::.iW For instar~ce, if tho les::rnr did not, obso]."'Ve thu interdict on talking and noise, usual in t~o tir~ of the burial of the chiefs; if he p3ssod ncor w~ore the chief's wife: w;.u:; ba~hing; or if ttl?,Y dnst or" any other dirt fell from the house of the tiri1r.ua 1.F)0n thQ chi(d or his w:Lf e whc:n pas sine; through t:1e street; then ir.,_ thucfl an<.i numbnrles,s otl1{0r similar cases the powerful aces deprived tha poor wretches of lib orty, and ty:;."',::mnic,~llly made them slaves and not only q1c,11 ;:mt ti11eir ehiJ.dr•Jn, and per;1aps tne wife and nl:'or rclDtivE=:::. '.i.'he ~-mrst thin::-; is thnt all those who had ~oen 3:aves by war, or for punishrnont or debts, 1°Jere rigorously regcJ.rdcd ns such, as 1 1 1 ,J < V •., ~ -164slaves for any kind of service or slavery, and served inside the house. The samG was true of their children in the manner of our slaveries, 2nd they could be sold at wi11, However, thu mas·ters Wt'3re not accustomed. to s r)ll those ·born und.er cheir roof, for they regarded them in tn~ li~ht of relatives. Those slaves wero allowed to tee~ for themselves a portion of any profit whic 1-t they made, The T:1galogs celled such true sl:.ivos §._cli~£]!iF:,i:Ll.ir,, and the Viso.yans halon. Other :3laves wer-2 c .::~11 ed na!]J,rnc. hu, for they did not ,serve their master in all cr:pacities, nor inside h:i.s house; ~)ut in thei:c ow::1 b.ousor~, and outside that of their rna,st,:;rs. '.L'hey were hour. . d, however, to obey their mastP-1'' s summons eitrrnr to serve in tis house 1:vhen he had honorod guests, or for the erection of his house and its ronair and in-the sAasons of sowin~ nnd harvest, They (had also to respond} to act-as his rowers whon he went out in his boat, and on other like occasions, in which th~y were obliged to serve their master without any pay. Among both kinds of slnves, s2n~uiguilir nnd n::i.momahay, it hap:oons that there arc: some who are w1.1.ole sl c..ves, some ·who arc half s::;_;ives, and some one-fourth p~rt slave, For if the father or the mother were free, ar:d had an only son, :1e was halffree and half slave. If they had rnol'e ;:;~1sn one child, these were so divided that the first followed the conditi~n of the father, whether freo or al~ve, and tho second that of ,che mother, So <Jj_6 it happen with successive pairs, J~t if there were nn odd number of children, the lust was halt freG and half slave. Those who descended fr0n1 thera, if they wore children of a free father or ~other, wero.slaves only i.1 the fourth part, as they wo:ce th0 children of a free father or mot~nr, and of one half slave. Sometimes, ·osc2us0 it happen,:d that two })(:Jople had agreed to marry and the men had no w0alth for tho dowry ..1 or rather, nothing with whir::h to buy his wife - he became hor slavo, In such case the children were divided in thG said rnanne1·, and the first, third, ,:md fifth, and the remo.inin.7, ones in the samo way were slaves, iYJ.asm.uch as they b nlong r.:d to the father; who WAS also a slave of the ruother and not -165only slaves to her, but also to her brothers and sisters and relatives, in case of her death and the division of her property. On the contrary the second, fourth, and others in the same way, were according to their custom free, inasmuch as they belonged to t h0ir mot1:1er who was fre~~; o.nd they were masters and rulers over tb,,.d.r own f::ith9r &nd brothers and sisters. The same thii--:g heppened in the case of interest, a thing of-so great importance ,:1mor1g them tha,t, as already rm11c1rked, tho father would not pardon the doht ,md interet::t oven to the son, nor,the son the father, even in case of necessity, until the one had made a slave of the other for it. Consequently, if one brother iansomed another brother, or a son his Zc:~th e:c, the 1o.tter remained a slave, a:::; did his deccendants, until the value of the ransom was paid with interest. Consequently, the captive was gain.er orily by the ch&1:.ge of rr;aster. Such ns the abo7e arG the monstrous things that are seem whore the law of God and Chris-tian che.rity are lacking. In the divisioP · mado between heirs, when a slave belonged to many, the time of his serv:i.ce was div::.dec. and each of the masters had the share that belor..ged t:,o him ::md was h:Ls in such slave; and the division was Jiade by montbs, or as was conveniGnt among thG masters. When a slave is not a whole slave but only a half or fourth part, he has the right to compel his mast or to give him his freedom for the just price at which he is appraised, according to the iank of the slavery, sc.nguig_ui~_:g: or ~§1£0.,flC,Y., But if' he bo a whole sle.ve, the lilaste:c cC:nnot be compelled to ro.nsom him at any price, even tho'.1gh he should hnvo become a slave for debt, if alren.dy th8 day set for t;1e payment of the debt has passed. There was another kind of service· which was not of a truth s-ervitudo, althou-sn it appeared to be such. If was ,:enerally seen aruon.g cGrtain persons called cabal o.r~.s.Y. Wh:21wver such persons . wanted any smC1.ll trifle, thi-?.y begged the hc::td chief of their barangny for it, anJ he gave it to them. In return, whenever he su.mrr:onod thorn thoy were obliged to go him to work in his fields or to row his boats. Whenever a feast or banquet was given, then they all came together and helped furnish the tuba, wine, or guilan, such ':Jeing their method of service. · · -166The ancient custom in manumission was for the whole .§...fillgniguilir to pay ten taes of gold, and the namamahay the half; and, in addition to that, ho had to give the half of whatever things he owned. For instance, if he owned two large jars he had to give one. In order to make that conveyance, the slave must make· a benguet, at which werG present masters, relatives, ~nd friends. At the ~eight of the banquet the delivery of the gold and household articles was made, those prC:-)Sent being witnesses that the master had received them. The latter was thereupon satisfied, and the slave was set free. Even today the Tagalogs are wont, at death~ to grant freedom to the children of thGir slav0s who are born in their house, no matter how young they be. However, they do not free the parents of those children no matter how old they be, .J.nd even if they have been served throughout life by them. That seems absolutely illogical. To what has been said of dowries and marriagGs, it must be added that in some districts, besides the bigayc13:yg and those presents made to the relatives, there w&s panhimg_y_fil. This was a kind of present that was given to the mother of the bride, merely in return for the bad and watchful ni?.:hts that she had passed in rearing her, That panhirnuyat_ signifies "watchfulness and care". If the dowry wns equal to five taels of gold, the 12.£lnhi::nuya~ was equal to one tinga, which was equivalea-to one tae, or five pesos. That was a custom which well shows tho harshness and greed of these nations, since the mothers wished to be paid even i' or the rearing of their daughters. Al so, whenever a chief married any daw,::hter of his and asked a large dowry of his son-in-law, as, for instance, eighteen or twenty taes of golu, the father was obliged to give his daughter cortain gifts called l?.§:.§Q!lQJ.:, such as a gold cha.in, or a couple of slaves, or something proportional to the dowry. It wns very shameful to ask a large dowry without giving a P.aSOU.Ql:• This is still done,· resembling the gifts which among us the father presents to his daughter 12.,raetor dot£.!!!, which thc3 civil law calls Q.Q.!1.§;_ pa:i:sJ: • £.b.ernal ia, -167- PART TWO THE F'IRST CENTURY OF SPANISH RULE CHAPTER ONE SPAIN AND THE PHILIPPIN~S IN THE 5IXTE2NTH AND SEVENTBENTH CENTUIUES The one-hundred-year period, extending from the estnblishment by Legaspi of the fj_re,t permanent Spnnish settlement in the Philippines (1565) to the uccession of Charles II in 1665, was from many points of view a glorious ono in Spanish national history. This period embraced the reigno of Philip II, Philip III anc1 PhiJ_ip IV. During t.his period Spain runked among the p;1·eat nations o.f the 'world. Her voice was listened to with attention and respect in the courts and She possessed a colonial empire chancilleries of Europe. of world-wide proportions. So extensive~ and far flung were her colonial possessions that King Philip II used to boast that the sun never set on th(=; Spanish E:r:rpire. For another reason, this age was a notable one for Spain for in ma.ny fields of human endeavor 3:xnliardt, · accomplished gre~t things, In literature, it was the age of Cervantes, Lope de Vega, Quevedo, and Caldero!1 de la Barco. -168It was the age,too, of Velasquez, Murillo and El Greco, famous painters. In architecture, Spain had two distinguished representatives in Juan Bautista de Toledo and Juan de Herrera, the builders of the Escorial. The Escorial together with the Cathedral of Villadolid, which was constructed under Herrera's supervision, represent two of the architectural glories of the reign of Philip II. In the field of interna- tional law Spain had a worthy representative in Francisco de Vitoria whose writings on the subject of international relations in times of war were valuable contributions to the literature of that subject, Philip II' s reign, lasting more than forty years (1556- 1598), is a memorable one in the history of Spain. During this period Spain reached the zenith of her imperial power, con~erned Grave problems of E1tate arose which/the lives an_d fortunes, not only of the Spanish people, but also of peoples in other lands. At home, the descendants of the Moors rose in revolt (1568-1570) in protest against alleged acts of injustice and intolerance on the part of the Spanish Goverm11ent. The Gov- ernment waged against the rebels a campaign of extermination, The Spanish Netherlands also rose in revolt (1566). dispatched a large force against the Dutch. Spain Spain's ef- forts at pacification, howev-er, failed to crush the spirit of resistance. The Dutch continued.their struggle for J.i- -169- beration from Spanish domination throughout the reirn of Philip II. In the field of foreign relations, challenging issues arose. Philip intervened in the civil war in France (1562- 1595) between the Houso of Guis~ and tha Bourb0ris. He sided with the· Guises in their struggle against the Bourbon King, Henry IV. Spain also took port in the war ag2inst the Turks and the ~~slems of North Africa, Her participation was a doter.mining factor in the conflict. In the naval engage- mer.t at Lepanto (1571), the decisive event of the wo.r, Spain and her allies defeated the Moslems. nexed Portugal to Spain. dependency of Spain. In 1580, Philip an- For si:i::ty years Po1,tugal was a Philio - ~- also became in7olved in a con- flict with Queen Elizabeth of England. In 15C6·, ho dis-· patched the Invincible Arma'ia against .2:ngland. however, was repulsed by ths British. The Arrno.oa, What reuained of it were destroyed by a furious tempest which arose in the I:nglish Channel. In the succeeding reigns, Spain beran to decline rapidly in power and influence. The num.crous viars vvhich arose in Europe in the s8ventcentii century put a severe strain on her strength and n1Dterinl resources. In the course of these wnrs, Dutch .:rnd British privateers preyed on Spanish -170- galleons on the _high seJ,s to Spain 1.s commerce. causint thereby enormous losses In 1640, the House of Braganza reco- vered from Spain the independence of Portugal. In 1648, at the close of the Thirty Years War, the Dutch likewise won from Spain their political independence. In 1655, the Bri- tish wrested Jamaica in the West Indies from Spain. reverses marked the beginning of a process of c~ecline and decadence the ultimate result of which we.s t11c disintGgration and Gxtinction of Spain's colonial empire. · In the period under consideration, Spanish colonialism in the Philippines took on its permanent form and character. In its administrative phase, the Spanish colonial system followed closely the pattern of colonial government that was established in Spanish America. Tho supreme governing b~dy was the Consejo de Indias (Council of the Indies) sitting in Spain. This body was created by Ferdinand in the first years of Spcnish colonization. It was reorganized by Charles I in 1524 to make it a more adequate agency for the administration of Spain's vast colonial empire. Its mem- bers, nppointe'd by the King, were chosen for their learning, their wisdom and their probity. The Consejo de Indias governed the colonies on behalf and in the name of the King of Spain. Its jurisdiction ex- -171- tended to all matters affecting the interests and welfare of the inhabitants of the Indies. It had in its hands all the important attributes of sovereignty - executive, judicial and legislati V(~. In its executive capacity it ap- pointed persons to the £ii[;her posts in the government of the colonies. As a judicial body, it was a court of final ap- peal to which decisions rendered by royal audiencias in the colonies were taken for review and final decision. In its legislative capacity, it enacted laws, orders, decrees, etc., for the government of the colcnies. The vast col- lection of colonial legislation now known collectively as the L3ves je Ir..dio.s (Laws of the Indio:3) was the ·,Jork of It is a rich source of information 1 on the history of the Spanish colonial system. the Consejo do Indias. For purposes of administration, Spain'.;;, colonies were d:Lvided into viceroyalt::1.E::S and these in turn were subdivided --------1 - The gre.:1ter part of the L_fyes cle In.cUc!§. c1.re kept and prcservGd in the Archivo do Indiai3 ir: 3Jv:'J.La, Spain. A . t o~f' t:-1E": 1mporta21t ctccu1:1en t s in . t'nG co.;.. ~7.• cc·t'ion was ma d e d iges and publish8d under the titlo, R.3cc,pil::1c.i_q_l}. ,J_e lc1s LevQs de J.os Reinos de LJ.S Indi;:u3. Th8 fi.rst edition of ~he R2cop=b,lacio:.1 Kas iJ:;:inted on 01,:-der.s of Gh&rles II in 16,'30. Thu fourtTi and J.c1.st edition was published in 1811-l, The fourth edition of the R,2q.Q_pilacio:1 consist,ed of 3 voJ.un~es, 9 books, and 218 Titles.-· ':'itle l:-6, vol. 3, Book IX of the Reco·;1iiac12l:2: reads: 11 C:oncerning the Nav:i.gation anrl Commerce of the Philippine Islands, China, l'Jaw Spain, and Peru. 11 1 • ' • -172- into captaincies-general, The Philippines was a captaincy- general under the jurisdiction of the viceroyalty of Mexico, then called Nueva Espafia (New Spain). In the Philippines, the administrative machinery established in the early years of Spanish rule remained, in its general outline and basic character, practically un- _ changed throughout the Spanish regime. At the head of the government was the Governor and Captain General of the Philippines. This official was also President of the Royal Audiencia and Vice-Regal Patron. As Vice-Regal Patron his duty was to protect and preserve the rights, interests and prerogatives of the Spanish Crown in religious and ecclesiastical matters. Assisting the Governor and Captain General in the government of the colony was the Real Audiencia (Royal Audiencia). As origi:::1.ally establish~d in 158/i.., this body had a two;..fold character: (1) it was an advisory or consultative body to the Governor and Captain General of the Philippines sharing with the latter some of his duties and responsibilities; (2) it was a judicial body, the highest court of justice in the colony. As the supreme court in the Phil~ ippines, it passed jud?;ment on casGs taken to it on appeal from the provinces, Except in some cases which could be elevated to the Oonsejo de Indias, decisions of the Royal -173- Audiencia were final, Other high officials in the Philippine government were the factor, the accountant, and the treasurer. These officials took charge of the revenues of the Crown. For administrative purposes the Philippines was divided into province[:;. In the ee.rly years of Spc::1nish rule the prov- inces were kncwn as ulcaldias and c0rre~~mien~os. The first were governed by officials called :.11 ca1 ·JN: n:1\.Q.I'..ss, the latter, by correpidor0s. These officials were appointed by the Governor and Captain General of the Philippines in consultation with the Real Audioncia. Apart froE1 thcdr duties as provincial executives, thay administered justice in their respective districtsr The provinces were in turn divided into towns and municipalities. As originally organized by the Spaniards, the town or municipality was nn adaptation of the pre· . .' 0pan1s,h I"'1·1 ipino communi·cy. 0 • organized for convenience or mutual benefit into a confederacy under the leadership of the most powerful and most influential d'3.~00 or rc11.ah in the community. Usin~; such .::i. community as a basis, the Spaniards org::mized new towns• In each town, a govcrnini body was set up of which the chief officinl was the ri:obernndor (governor), subsequently ----·-- ~ -174- called r.:oberno.dorciilQ. (petty governor). Morga in his Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas described the system of local government as it existed in the early years of Spanish rule. governor who is elected, 17 Each village, 11 h·e wrote, "has a He and his constables who are called vilanfc':os comprise the usual magistracy among the natives, The governor hears civil suits whore a moderate sum is involved; in appeal the case goes to the corregidor or alcnlde mayor of the province. These governors are elected annually by the votes of the married natives of such and such a village. The governor of M:mila confirms the election, and gives the title of governor to the one elected • • • &Q.Y.§., This governor holds the chiefs, lords of baran- under his rule and government, and, for any special service, such as collections of tributes and assignments of personal services, as his dc1tos and ~.9.Ql.1f:..§., it The Spanish colon:Lal administration was a highly centralized one. The separation of powers which ~as a char- acteristic feature of the governmental systems of England and the United States was unknown in Spain. In tho Span- ish colonial administr,::ition the functions of government, whether in th~ central, provincial or town level, were concentrated in one governing body. -175- The Spanish r6gime, as a general policy, respected and preserved the lai,1s and customs of the early Filipinos. This was so particularly in regard to slavery, successions, !,d··-.;,.., Opv..:..OP0, wills and business transactions. inheritances, c,,_ Royal decrees enjoined ~,lwt disputes arising over these matters should be deteriained and judged in accordance with Filipino laws and customs. It was in view of this require- mcnt of Spanish colonial policy that during the administration of Governor Santiago de Vera, Father Plasencia was commissioned to mako a study and subrr.it a report on Filipino customary law. 2 The same policy was followed in reg~rd t-o the form.er chiefs of barangays. The honors and priv:ileges the latter enjoyed ns such were recoe;nized and respected. in his work already cited, wrote: As 1VIorga, ilThe king our sovereign has ordered by his decrees that the honors of the chiefs be pres~rved to them as such; and that the other natives recognized them and assist them with certain of the labors that they used to give Hhen pagans. When he harvest::; his rice, they go one day to help him; and the same if he builds a house, or rebuilds one." Moreover, the former chiefs of baro.ngays V'.ere givGn important duties and responsibilities in the government of the town. ----- 2 - Vide S.unra They were the -176agents of the· gob:e1~nadorcillo in the collection of the tribute and in thEf ·assigning of men in their reopecti ve barc::mgnys for the polos,y, servicios (personal services ~o the State). A notable feature of Spanish colonialism was the encomienda system. Spain regarded the colonies as properties of the Crown and their inhabitants as subjects of the King. As subjects, they were required to pay tribute- and to render personal services to the State. In the Philippines, as in other colonies of Spain, the land areas together with their inhabitants were apportioned into encomiendas. miendas were of two kinds: royal and private. Enco- The royal en- comiendas, which included the principal centers of population, were reserved to the Crown. given to Private encomiendas were private individuals as regards for services rendered to the Crown in the pacification and conguost of the Philippines. The income from the royal cnconr~endas accrued to the royal treasury; the tribute from private encomiendas was collected by the encomenderos for their own use and benefit. The encomenderos, however, were required to contribute part of the tribute for the support and maintenance of religious instruction in their respective encomiendas. Under the laws of the Indies, the privilege of -177- holding an encomiendas lasted for two generations, subject to extension, by parmission, to a third generation. Prominent among the distinguishing characteristics of the Spanish colonial o.dventu,re in the Philippines was the deep int~rest taken by the Kings of Spain in the propaghtion of the Catholic religion. The conversion of the Filipinos to Catholicism was a major aim of Spanish colonial policy. Spain wanted the Philippines to beccme an advctnced outpost and center of Christianity and of Christian culture in the Far East. In pursuance of their religious aims, the Sp2nish sovereigns assumed for themselves the role and character of patrons of the Church. As such they 'took upon thernsel ves the duty and responsibility of providing the Church with all the means she needed to carry out successfully her ~ission. Ministers going to the Indies were transported at royal expense; churches nnd convents were erected in the colonies; and due provision was made for the support and maintenance of the Church and her ministers in the .colony. In return for these services, the Spanish Monarchs obtained from Rome special rights and privileges. Pope' Julius II, in a Papal Bull issued in 150a, granted to Ferdinand and his successors on the throne of Spain (1) the -178- right to erect churches in the Spanish colonies, and (2) the right to nominate 3uitable person's, churches, cathedrals, and other ecclesiastical benefices and pious places~ This Bull was the source and basis of what is known as Real_Patronato (Royal Patronage), The Patronato gave to the kings of Spain considerable powers of supervision and control in the administration of 1 Church affairs. These powers were exercised in the Philip- pines by the Governor and Captain General in his capacity ---"--------------- as Vice-Regal Patron (Vice-Real Patron). ~ The nature and scope of these powers were defined in detail in a decree promulgated by Philip II in June 1574.. The text of the decree was incorporated in the royal instructions given to Gomez Perez Dasmarifias, Governor and Captain Generc1l of the Philippines during the years 1590-1593. The outstanding achievement of the Spanish polonial adventure in the Philippines in the first century of Spcmish rule wns unquestionably the rapid conversion of the Filipines to Christianity. This was the work of the Spanish missionari0s who 1-vent to the Philippines in the first years of Spanish rule. Pioneers in this undertaking were the Agustinian Fathers who came with Legazpi. They were joined a few years later by missionaries of other relig~ous orders -179- in Spain - Franc is cans J.n 1577, Jesuits in 1581, Dominicans in 1587 and Recollects in 1606, Within a generation fol- lowing the arrival of Legazpi Christianity had been prenched in practically all parts of the Philippines. By 1600, the great majority o.f the Filipino people had been brought, through the sacrament of baptism, within the Catholic fold. To take care of the spiritual needs of the new converts, parishes were organized in the towns und cities in tt..e Philippines. Th0 general rule regarding the ad.minis- tration of pnrishes as J.2id down by the Council of Trent 'IWS that secular priestc, thc-,t is, priests not at,tacLed to any religious order or congree;E;.tion and bound by the r11les of that order, should t.e l:e charge of parochi.::tJ. work. At that early stage of the colonial period 1 however, there were very few secular ::_::Jriests in Spain avail2bl€ for service in the parishes in the PhilippinGs. For this reason the missionaries themselves, apart from their duties as .9.9ctrinero,s ( teachers of Christiau doctrine) to,Jk over tte responsibility of attendin3 to the spiritual needs and ~el- fare of the new converts. They ivere :cefer:cec: to, in that capacity, as friar-curates. This arran<_?;ement ·was 111.1.de posc:ibl.e by a dispcmsTt:.on or concession fl'. ra.Le n~- d 0 by- the Pop· e_ nt the reo_uest of Philip II. -i -180- The concession, in the words of the Dominican historian, Vicente de Salazar, "exempted the religious of the Indies, who were employed in the parishes, notwithstanding the requirements to the contrary of the Council of Trent, from the jurisdiction and visitation of the Ordinaries and the latter's examination and approbation necessary for the taking of this charge, (and permitted) the religious ta remn.in, even in their capac.ity as ministers of souls, under ~he absolute and sole jurisdiction of their respective supervisors."3 The grant of this concession proved to be a fruitful source of misunderstanding and controversy between the diocesan authorities, the bishops and archbishops, and the friar-curat-es. The diocesan authorities as such had their duties and responsibilities to discharge nnd these included periodic diocesan visitations and general supervision over the work of the parish priests in their ·respective dioceses, The friar-curates, on the other harid, claimed by virtue of the privileges conceded to them by Rome, exemption from the jurisdiction and visitation of the diocesan officials. Such a situation was bound to produce as in fact did pro3 - Historia de la Provincia Santisimo Rosario. Manila, 1742. Quotation is from Sob re Una Rosofia Historica de Fili: pinns, Manila, 1906, -lSl- duce, conflict and controversy. A number of such controver- sies arose in the early part of the Spanish period. among these were Bishop Prominent Salazar's cor:flict with the Agusti- nians and Franciscans. (1581), the 1652-1654 incident, and the Camacho controversy 11hich started in 1697. In its economic aspects, the Spanish color:ial policy in the sixtecmth and sevonteenth centuries was, in characin common ter and spirit, strongly mercantilistic. with many European nations in early modern times, '.Jased her colonial policy on the doctrines and con~cpts of mercantilism. She followed a policy of excJ.usivism and monopoly in corn- mere ial matters, of str::..ct r:J?ulat ion and control of the me8ns of pro1uction and distribution of the nation's resources. In line with such a policy, foreieners (j .• e., Europeans), were excluded from the colonies. , vn'th could· t raae . ··. th - __ e I n a·ies. Spanish merchants alone Th e. t.,.,h.,. . ··t·+ed l.L ippines v:a s pE:rnii., ._, . to trnde with China and other countries of the Orient, subj ect, however, to string cnt regulations. P~1ili'.~)ir..e for- eign trade outsidci of Asia was confined to Nuova Zsp~fia, but this trade was c1.lso V8ry much restricted, The numbr,r of vessels a year allowed to be dispatched to Acapulco in Nueva Espana was limited. The tonnage of tho vescels also was limited, as well. as the v1:1lue of the n1.ercll9ndiso to be ·-182- carried in the galleons, both on the outgoing voyage and on the return. Merchm1ts whether in Nueva Espana or in the Philippines were forbidden to establish commercial agencies None of the merchandise brou;::;ht from the Philip- in Asia. p5.nes to Nu.eva Espn:?i.a could be intro dt.J.c 0d to o.ny other Spanish colonies in the New World, 0·2 the Those ro,stric - tions were iFiposed in the intQrest of Spanish merchants in Cadiz and Sevilla who hnd a monopoly of the trade of the NovJ World. The death of Philip IV in 1665 and the accession of Charles II imr1edia.tely thereafter mark:::d the corr.plotion of one hundred years of 3pariish colonization in the Philippines. During this period, twenty-one persons occupied the post of governor and captain general of the Philippines,4 Of these, seven served as governors ad interim.5 On £'our different occasions, the Royal Audiencia took over the powers and functions of the chief executive in the nbsonce of the proprietary governor, viz., 1606-1608, 1616-1618, 1624-1625, 4 - Legazpi served from 1565 until his death in 1572, Contemporan0ous with tho acceE.ision of Ch2rles II -was the administration of Diego de Salcedo, 1663-1668, 5 - Guido do Lavezares, 1572-1575; Diego Ronquillo, 15C3-g4; Pedro de Roj3s, 1593; Luis Persz Dasmarifiis, 15931596; Rodri~o de Vivero, 160C-1609; Fernando de Silva, 162526; Juan Cerezo de Salauanca, 1633-1635, -183and 1632-1633. At the end of this period, the sovereignty of Spain in the Philippines hc1d been consolidated and firmly e.stablished. It had survived the dangers that at one time or another threatened its existence - the Portuguese a~gressions ngainst Le~azpi at C ebu (1566), the Lim;1hong attack on Manila (157h), the Cliineae uprisings (1603) and (1639), and,_ of even greater danger, the various Filipino revolts that occurrGd during this time. Of the latter, tho ono~; that proved to be particularly perturbing we:r-e: che Lakandola- Soliman revolt of 157 4, 6uring Lavezare;:;' ;:?;ovr:ffnor,sLi_p; the widespread conspiracy of 1587-eS, led by Ag~stin de Legazpi and Magat SaJ.amat, chief c of Tondo, during the governorsl:ip of Santiago de Vern; the Su~noray robellion of 161-1-9, dur:i.ng the administration of Diego 2e jardo (16/:.4-1654); and the ltSCD-1661 revolts, dur:Lnc: the administrc.tion of Sabiniano M.-,_nriquu de Lara (1653-J.663), which flared up simultaneously in Petrnp::mge, Pc1nrasin::m and I1oco.s under the leadership, respectively, of Francisco Mailia1.:;o, Andrc>s It1fr1lon~, ond Pedro Almasan. The Filipino revolts refleeted the reaction produced among the Filipinos towa1·ds the changes 2.nd innovations • t.r1e l • • l • h accompanied the establishment 1n wnc :~11l'l.1pp1nes uJ. D Spanish sovereignty. In 1ri.any case~, the rE;Volts were the -184- outgrowth of the keen resentment and outraged feelings of the peopl~ and their leaders over the loss of their former liberties. as In mo :=;t eases, howevez·, the underlyin.e; as well the ir:unediate c.:iuses of discontent -vvhich gt\Ve rise to the revolts were the tribute 2nd the D0 7 os v servict.9...§., These impositions of Spanish sovereignty prov0d to be particularly hateful and irritating because of the harsh and violent manner in which they were generally exact~d by Spanish encomenderos and Spanish officials. In 1665, Charles II, the last of the Spanish Hapsb~1rgs, ascended the throne in Spain. He did not have· the strong qualities that c!1aracteriz:;d the first rulers of the dynasty, He was weak both in body and in mind. in 1700 'v'Jithout leaving any heir. He diod His dr::nth g&ve :rise to a problem which attracted great interest, not only in Spain but in many countries of Europe as well. -185- CHAPTER '!WO MORGA ON THE EARLY YEARS OF SPANISH RULE In the same eighth chapter of the Sucesos de las Islas Filipina 2 in which he described the life and culture of the Filipinos, Dr. Morga wrote about the Spani~h colonial enterprise in the Far East during the first years of Spanish rule. Important aspects of the Spanish colonial administration We~e dealt with ·such as the work of the missionaries, the administrative system in the colony, the encomienda system, the financial status of the Colony and the trade of the Philippines with Nueva Espana anq with their Oriental neighbors •1 The arrival of the Spaniards in these Filipinas Islans, sine~ the year orte thousand five hundred and sixty-four, the pacification and conversion that has been made therein, their mode of governing, and the provisions of his Majesty during these years for , their welfare, have caused innovations in many things, such as are usual to kingdoms and provinces that change their religion and sovereign. The foremost has been that, besides. the n~me of Filipinas which all the islands took and received from the beginning of their conquest, they belong to a new kingdom and seigniory to ·which his iVIajesty, Filipo Second, our sovereign, gave the name of Nuevo Reyno de Castilla ( "New Kingdom of Castilla 11 ) , By his royal cone es- _ sion, he made the city of Manila capital of it, and gave ~o it as a special favo_r; among other things, ,, . 1 '-B.&, R., vol. 16, pp. 135-193, being portions of the eighth cha pt er of :IY'.Iorga' s Sue eso s. -186- a crowned coat-of-arms which was chosen and assigned by his royal:_person. · This is an escutcheon divided across. In the upper part is a castle on a red field, and in the lower a lion of gold, crowned and rampant, holding a mtked sword in its right paw. One-half of the body is in the fcrm of a dolphin upon the waters of the sea, to signify t~1at the Spaniards crossed the sea -witi1 their arrns · to conquer this kingdom for the crown of Castilla~2 The city of Mariila was founded by the adelantado Miguel Lopez de Legazpi, first governor of the Filipinas, in the islend of Luzon, It occupies the same site where Rajamora had his set,tlement and fort -- as has been relatec. more at length -- at the mouth of the river vvhich empties into the bay, on a point between the river and the sea. The whole site ~as occupied by this new settlement, and Legazpi apportioned it to the Spaniards in equal building-lots. It was laid out wit:1 well-arranged streets and squares, straight and level. A suffici'3ntly large main square (FlQ.Q.JIL9Y.Q£j was left, fron-i:.:;_f!.g wi1ich were erected ~l1e cathedral church and munici·oal buildings. I:Ie left another square, tha·t. of an11c- (Plaza de armas), fronting \vhich was bv.ilt. the fort, as well as the royal buildings. Ee gave sitPs for the monasteries, hospital, anct chapels which were to be built, as being a city which was to r;row and in-· crease continually-~ as already it hGs done; for, in the course of the time that has passed, that city has flourished as much as the best of all the cities in those regions. The city is completely s;1rrounded. ·with a stone wall, which is more than t.-i:w and one-h2,lf ve.ras wide, and in plnc es more than three. It :1as small towers and traverses at intervals. It has a fo~tre~s of hewn ~to~e at the point that guards the bar ahd the river, with a ravelin close to the water, upon which 2 - The coat-of-arms of the Government of the Philippine Islands as adopted oy the Philippine Commission on July 3, 1905, included, as one of its outstanding features, the old coat-of-arms described in this' account by Dr. l-1orga. -187,. are mount~d some large pieces of aitillery. This artillery .comrno.nds the so.a and river, wh:Ll.e other pieces a.re· mountc°q fEJ.rther up to defend the oa:c, besides some other moderate~sized-field-~ieces and swivel..:.guns. These:· fort:.ficat:.:.ons have~ their vaults for storin3 Bupplics and m~nitions, and a magazine for the pm-:der> whic:7. is ~vell guc,rded and situated in the innor part; aLti a copious well of fresh water. There are 2lso ouarters for the soldiers and artill~ryru~n,· nnd th~ house of the commandant ( alcayde) ~ · Tho city has b,;en lately fortified on the lana side _at the Plaza de arnus; ~here it is entered by h strong wall and tw6 salient to~ers, defended with srt:l.11ery·, which comue.r.i.d the 'v'J.::tll and gate~ This fortress is called 3antiagol and has a company o:f thir·c:' soldiors wi.th their offi'cors, and eight artillorynwn who :;uard the gai:,e and entrance by. watctes -- al:i_ in charge of a commanc1:ant who lives inoide, Etna :1as the guard and custody o.: the fort. There is another fortrass, also of stone, in the small wall, 11:Lthin ci:lvei."in range 7 1oc::,0°;d at the end of tl:1e curtain, vJhich extcmds n2.or:_g t,hc shore of the bay. It is called Nuestra Se1ora de Guia, and is a· very 1 arc;e to:ver, It ha.s its mm court, vilell, 2nd quarters insic.e, as woJ.l &.3 the magazine, and other rooms for 1wrk. It hD. s a traverse extend_;_ng to the beach, on w:1ich are rn,Junted a dozen lar,~;:::: 2.nd r11od.e:'ate-sizH:;_ pieces, which command the oay and swenp t:1e walJ., which e·~;::;cLds alonq the shore to the ~ate and to the fort of Santiag;, On the other s{tio the fo~tress ~as n lnrge s2lient tmvr3r; mounted w:i.th f'om' :1-c.1rge }Jiecos, which corumand tha shor~ che3d in the dir0ction of tho chapel of Kue3tra Se::.'.ora de G1.i:'c.i."1.. The :::c1.te anC. entrc'.nc0 is wit.L.in the c:Lty and is ;:-y.ard(~rl by a comp1.ny o.f twe:it:r sol diE::rs ar..d their offic2~'s, six artj_ll eryr.1en, and one commo.ndant and his lieut. enant, who live inside. On the land side, vvhere the w2ll e::;~tends, there is a rnmpart, callod Sant Andres, which uounts six pieces of artiJlery that commirn.d in o.11 directions, and some swivel-guns. FartlHcr on is ::moti1er traverse callud S~n Gabri0l, opposite the parian of -188- the Sangl eys with a like amount of cJ.rt ille ry. have some soldiers and on ordinary guard. Both The wall has a sufficient height, and is furnished with batt1ements and turrets, built in the modern style, for its del'ense. It h2-s a circuit of about one legua, which can be made entirely on top. It has many broad steps of the same hewn stone,. at intervals inside. 7h~re are thres principal city gaves on the land side, and many o~hor poster~G opening at convenient places on the rivo~ e.nd beach, for the service of the city. Each and all o~ them are locked before nightfall by the ordinary patrols. These carry the keys to the guard-room of the royal buildings. In the morning when day comes, the patrols return with the keys and open the city • • • • Within the city is the monastery of St. Augustine: It is very large and has many dormitories, a refractory and kitchens. They are now completing a church, which is one of the most sumptuous in those districts. This convent has generally fifty religious. The monastery of St, Dominic is ins iclc t,~-10 vvaJ.1s., It contains about forty religious. It was built ofstone, and was very v-Jell constructed. It has a church, house, and all offices. It has l2tely been rebuilt, and much better; for it was completely destroyed in the burning of the city in tho ~rear sixteen hundred and three. The monast~ry of St. Fraric is . is f art}13:1.~ on. It is well constructed of stone, and its church.is being rebuilt. It contains about forty doscalced religious. The residence (cole7.io) of the Soci0ty of Jesus is established ne::i.1: the .fortress of nuestra Senora de Guia. It contains t~;!enty religious of their order, and is un excellent stone house and church. Thero they study Latin, the arts, and cases of conscience. Connected with them is a seminary and conviccorio for Spanish scholars, with their rector. These students wear gowns of tawnycolored frieze with red facings. -189- In another part of the city stands a handsome house, walled in, with its stone church, called San Andres and Santa Potenciana, It i3 a royD,1 foundation, and a rectoress livec there o It h2.s 'a revolving entrance and. a parlor, and the rectoress has other confidential assist2nts; and ~here shelter is given to neody women 2nd girls of the city, in the form of religious retirement. Some of the girlo leave the house to be married, while ot~~rs remain there permanently. It hE).s it, s own hou.s e for ;Jork, and its ch_oir. His Majesty assi3ts th•c:1.1 witl1 c:. portion of their maintenance~; t?ie res":, is :;:irovided by thDir own industry and property. Ttey Lave their own steward and their priest, who adGiniste~s the sacrawents to them •••• ' . This city is the capital of the kingdom and the head of the ,'.sOVernmont of ell tr:e isl.and.s. It is rthe reetropolis of the other cities arid settlements of the islands~ In it reside the Audiencia allCl Chanchilleric, of his l-1?.jesty, and the governor and captain-general of the ~slan~sd Manila has a city catildo with two o.lcaldes in•ordL!ary, t~v~l--~e per~et.ual regidors, ar,. alP;v. a cil ·· mayor (:i,e~, ~1nei cons~c1.cle), a ro:ral s":.ar:idarc.i.bearer, scrivan8r of the cabildo, and other otficials, The archbishop of 'che Filipinas IslDnds resides in this city. 1-ie £1c1s his metropolitan chvrch, and all the catheir&l dignitaries -- ca~ons, r2cioneros, media s rncione ros, clw.plA.ins, and sGcris-:::-D.r:.s ·-- and a mueic-ctoir uho ch&nt to ti1e 2ccompanL11ent of the oq~an and of !'lutes \Ii:inistri2..t3_§_) ~ 'I'h8 cathedral is quite ornate and vJell ci.E;cora.ted, and tlie Divin~ off~ces ~re celebrated there with t~e utrno2t gravity and 6erenony. As suffrGgans the catheJrcl has · h.ops -- na-1::1.w J-Y, :::_n · t h e 1s_ · l ano.' 01~ 0eou, " ' nd th ree '01s a, in Cagayan and Camarines. There is a roynl trebsury wit~ three royal officials -- factor, accountant, and treasurer -- by whom the royal l'evenue of all the islcrnd3 is managed. , .. -190- I~ the province (of Cagayan) of this same island of Luzon was founded the city of Sezovia, during the term of Don Gonzalo Ronquillo, the third governor,3 It has two hundred Spanish inhabitants who live in wooden houses on the shore of the Tajo _River, two 1 eguos from the sea o.nd port of Ca!l1alayaga. There is a stone fort near t~e city for ~he defense of it and of the river. Thi:3 fort mouncs some artillery, and has itc own ccmmandant. 3osides the inhabitdnts, there are gor_erally one hundred regular soldiers, arquebusiers, und their offic~rs. They are all in chc1.rR:e ,::md. under comrr,and of the alcaldemayor of the province, ·v\JhO is its military commander, In that city is established a bishop and his church, although at present the latter has no dignitaries or prebendaries, There is a city cabildo consisting of two Qlcaldes, six1regidors, and ~n alguacil-mayor. The city abounds in all l:inds of food and refreshm,3nt at very cheap prices. The city of Caceres was founded in the province of Camarines of the sarre island of Luzon, during the term of Doctor Sande, governor o~ the Filipinas.. It has about one hundred Sp2-nisi1 inhabitan,ts, and has its cabildo, consisti:1g of aJ.caldes, rogidors, aqd officials. A bishop of that province is established th1::;re and has hi .s church, al tl-1cug!1 ·with·· out dignitaries or prebendaries. A monastery of discalc8d Franciscans is located there. TLe government and milito.ry affairs of :-,hct province are under one alcalde-mayor and war-captain, who resides in Caceres. T~s latter is a place abounding in and furnished with ell kinds of provisions, ut v~ry low rates. It is foundeC on the bank of a river, four 1 eguas inland from the sea, .and its houses are of wood. The fourth city is that called Santisimo Nombre de Jesus; it is located in the island of Sebu, · 3 - Nueva Sego via was o:i:-iginall y estabJ. ished near the site 1,,1here the to~-m of Lal-loc ,now stands. It was founded by Juan P. Ca.rreoi1, cornrnander of the expedition which drove the Japanese corsair Tayfusa from the coast of Northern Luzon, -191- in the pro vine(~ of Bicayas or Pintados. It was the first Spanish scttleJent and was founded by the adelantado Miguel Lopez de Legazpi, the first governor. It is a fine seaport, whose water· is very clear and deep, and capable of holding many vessels~ Tte city has an excellent sto!1e f:irt, w!-ii8h mon_nts a considerable ~i&nti~y of arti::ery, and ~~~eh has its com1nar:dant nnd officers for t::.e [,)J.ard and G.efen:::;e of the port and of the city. It is suf~iciently ~arri11 ren. sonea ·i· .....~ 'u.-'1,•c.-,,, 0O ·u ·-::,~,rl 01.·" t'1e . , , 1 '·vv it Si.A.·.1- "'rC' ~J, v-:-....-nd .1. .J.•...,.... ·~ alcalde-mnyor, the :-aj_lit<1ry cornr:.:ind·~~' of ·::.he province, who lives in the cit:r. 'I':he sstt,l,;3'.':iert contains about two hundred Spanish inhajitan~s who live in houses of wood. It has a cab~ldo, consistinz of two alc-':1.ldes -- in-orc.ina.ry, 8ight regidors, and an algUc::.cil-may:Jr and his o.:ficersQ It has a bi3hop and his church, like those of other cities of these islands; without prebendaries. 1 1 J. 1 CL 1 ,.1c..11J. J. The city is provided with food by, and is a station fer, the si1::.ps goir:g from J\.'bluc:J to Manila. Thr<;rngh his l\11.ajPsty' EJ cour:ession they keep the:"'e a deep-c.raft rnerchan":. v es se:1., which 6 enerall:r leaves its port for N\wva Eop2:?ia, laden wi ~h the nerchnndise of the products gathered in those provincgs. It has a mon.3.stery of Augu~ti:'.1icn religious -3.nd a seminary of the Society of Ja3us. Th0 tow~ of Arevalo was founded on the island of Oton (Pun.J), d:ir:.ng the term of Don Joi::zalo Ronquil:_0. It contL5ns atou~:; eig 1.1t:' Spa:l::...sh tnhabitan~s. a~J is locEtej aJose to these~. It haa & WY)o.en fort, 1-ihich ncun~s so:wi r·r~i::_:;_ery, and a mon2.stery of the Oro.e:r' of St, J1-u:-!'k:i.in3 :; also a i:'l.t"' "ts O•Jl 1 Vi--.·:iv• :;1,i c.,~"'i'-c?I' 1)·,isst P·a1•-:c;l--'-1-..,11.. C ...Jl'l'C.h . This ch11:cch beJ_onR:a ·~ to tne 0.io.::ese o.+· tte .=i2bu bis~opric. It has ri ca½i:do, consisti~; of alcaldes, re 6 idors, ar:d other o:'.:'fi.:::iuls. Tlv~:..·e is one alcalc.e-rna:ror and. militJ.:cy leadf,jr iri those pr8v~.nces. The tcwn ic well sup1-,li8d with all kinds of provisions, sold at very low rates. I - 1 ,t. ' ~ .;,,L -- ( .. ·~(, . .J.. .. \ - -t. \..., ._,...., ·t.-. 4 , en:env . +- Cf TJ· Le. • l 1 a 1< ernan ct J.na, • Th l e Set t .:.. ''.1 . ... .J.. -· l-- • h W11lCi was foundod in the province of the I1ocos on the is- 4 - Now Vigan, Ilocos Sur. • -192- land of Luzon, is settled by Spaniards, but -very few of them remain there. It has a church, with its own vicar and secular priest. Now no mention will be made of it, on accoun~ of what has been said. The alcalde-mayor of the province resides there, and the town is situated in tne cio~ese of the Cagayan bishopric. From the earliest beginni~g of the cocquest and pacification of the Filipinas Isl2nds 1 the preaching of the holy gospel tirnrein and ":.he conversion of the natives to the holy Catholic fa~tt W3re undertaken. Tte first to set hand to this task were the religious of the Order of St. Augustine, who went there with the adelo.ntado Legazpi in the fleet 0f discovery, and those of the sane order who went afterward to labor in this work. and toiled therein with great fervor and zeal. Thus, finding the harvest in good season, they gathered the first fruits of it, and converted and ½aptized many infidels throughout the s&id islands, Next to them in the fame of this conyersion, the discalced religious of the Orde~ of St, Francis went to the isl&nds by way of I~eva Rsp~fia; th0n those of the Or~er of Sto r~minic 1 ar.d of tte Society of Jesus. Lustly, the dis6alced Augustinian Recollects we~t. One and all, after being established in the islands, wo rkcd in tte conve:t·sion ar.d instruction of the natives. Consequently they have made -- and there are now in ail t~e Islanris -- a great numter of ba 11tized nitives. ~Jesides n,anv others in many parts, who-: fer w2nt of ia-,)Orerc;, rav~ been t~i·s b 1 A~~~rg Pu t of~ and u.~re a~JQ~ti·n~ \: ··s ;nd "-icsts l_..J .... -to minister- to the::1. I-b_"thei."to thF:·A h:tvc-:; been but fev~ rrissions in cha::".'ge o: sec .1le.r pries::::,s~ as i1ot many of those have gone to the islinds, a~d as very few have been ordained there-, for lack of students • •· _,_' .1. a,_ _1.'---,:; J .• _ .._ ...1-.._,,:J·J- ~c.,. 1 . The Order of St. Augustine has many r::issj_ons in the islands of Pintados and has establ:i.sr:ed and occupied monasteries and various visitas. In the island of Luzon, they have thoRe of the ~rovince of Ylocos, some in Fangnsinan, and all thos8 of La Pampanga - a large number of monasteries; while in the province of Manila and its vicinity they have others, which are flourishing. The Order of St. Dominic has the missions of the province.of Cagayan, and others in the province of Pangasinan, where are many monasteries c1nd visitas. They also administer others about the city. The Order of St.· Francis has some missions and monasteries about Manila, all the provj_nce o.f Gamarines and the coast opposite, and La Laguna de Bay. These include many missions. . The Society of Jesus rias three large missions in the neighborhood of Manila which have many visitas. In the Pintados it has many others ofi the islands of Sebu, Leite, Ybabao, Camar (Samar), Bohol, and others near 'by. They have good men, who are solicitous for the conversion of the natives. These four orders have produced many good results in the conversion of these islnnds, as above stated; and in zood sooth the people have taken firm hold of the faith, as they are a people of so good understanding. They have recognized the orrors of their paganism and the truths of the Christian religion; and they possess tood and well-built churches and monasteries of wood with their reredoses and beautiful ornaments, at>:l c1.lJ. the ut3nsils, crosses, candJ.e st-icks, and cl1.o.lices of silver ar..d i::.;old. :Many devotions nre offered, and there 2.re rne.ny confraternities. rter~ is assiduity in taking the sacram8nts an~ in att~ndan:e on the Divine services; and the people are careful to entertain an1 support their religious ( to whom they show groat obedience and rBspect) by the many alffis that they give them, as well as by those that they give for th0 suffr2ges and t'.1e burial of their dead, whict they p:~oVide with all punctuality and liberality. At the same ti;:ne tha.t the relirdous ut!der't.ook to teach the natives the precepts or'-'roli::;ion, they labored to instruct them in m3tters of their m·m improvement, and esta.bl ished schools for the reading and writing of Spanish among ti1e boys, They taught them to serve in the church, to sing the plain-song, and to the accompaniment of the organ; to play the flute, to dance and to sing; and to play the harp, guitar, and other instruments. In this they show very great adaptability, especially about Manila; where there are many fine choirs of chanters and musicians composed of natives, who are skilful and have ~ood voices~ There are many dancers' and musicians on the other instruments which solemnize and adorn the feasts 'of the most holy sacrament, and many other feasts during the year. The native boys present dramas and comedies, both in Spanish in their own language, very charmingly. This is due to the care and interest of the religious, who work tirelessly for the natives' advancement. In these islands there is no native province or settlement which resists conversion or does not desire it. But, as above stated, baptism has been postponed in some districts, for lack of wo~kers to remain with the people, in order that they may not retrograde and return to their idolatries. In this work, the best that is possible is done, for the mission-fields are very large and ext0nsive. In many districts the religious make use, in their visitas, of certain of the r.atives who are clever and well instructed, so that these may teach the others to pray daily, instruct them in ot:ier matters touching religior., and see that they come to mass at the central missions; and in this way they succeed in preserving and maintainir.g their converts. Hitherto, the orders who control these missions in virtue of the o:n.i.1::..wodo and other apostolic concessions have attended to the conversion of the natives, administered the sacraments, loo~ad after the spiritual and ter~oral ~nd ecclesiastical affairs of the natives, and absolved them in cases of difficulty. But now that there are an archbishop and bishops, this is being curtailed, and the management of these affairs is bej_ng given to the bishops, as the archbishop's vicars - although not to such an extent, nor has the administration of these natives been placed in their charge, in matters of justice, and under the inspection and superintendence of the bishops, as they have endeavored to obtain. -195The governor and royal Audiencia of I,Ianila attend to what it is advisable to provide and direct for the greatest accomplishment and advancement of this conversion, and the administration of the natives and their missions -- both by causing the encomenderos to assist the religious and churches, in the encomiendas that they enjoy, with the stipends and necessary expenses of the missions; and by furnishing from the royal revenues what pertains to it, which is no less a sum. They also ordain whatever else is required to be provided and remedied .for the said missions and for the advancem~nt of the natives. This also is attended to by the, archbishop and the bishops in what pertains to them in their duty and charge as pastors. The Holy Office of the lnquisition, residing in Mexico of Nueva Espana, has its commisaries, servants, and helpers in Manila and in the bishoprics of the islands, who attend to ,11atters touching the Holy Office. They never fnil to have plenty to do there oecause of the entrance of so many stranger::; into those districts. However, this holy tribural does not have jurisdiction of the causes pertaini~g to the natives, as the latter are so recently converted. All these islands are subdued, and are governed from Manila by means of alcaldes-mayor, corregidors, and lieutenants, each of v-:hom rules and a<lJ.1inisters justice in his own district and province. Appeals from their acts and sentences go to the royal Audiencia. The governor and captain-general provides what pertains to government and wa:c. The chiefs, who formerly h8ld the other natives in subjection, now have no power ovar them in the tyrannical manner of former days. This 1:1as. not ti:1e 1 east benefit received by these natives in raving been freed from such servitude. Ho·,vever, it is tr ..H3 that matters touching the sla.ve::."'y of former days have remainod on the same footing as be.fore, The k_ing, o·o.r sovereign has ordered by his decrees that the honors of the chiefs .be preserved to them as such; and that the other natives recognize them and assist them with certain of the labors that they used to give when pagans. This is done ·with the lords and possess-ors of barangays, -196- and those belonging to such and such a barangay are under that chi€:Z' 1 s control. When he harvests his rice, they go one day to help him; and the same if he builds a house, or rebuilds one. This chief lord of a barangay collects tribute from his adherents, and takes charge of these collections, to pay them to the encomendero. Besides the above, each village has a governor who is elected. He and his conatables who are called vilangos comprise the usual r.ia1~dstracy amons the natives The ,:::overnor hears civil suits ·.vhore a moderate sum is-involved; in appeal, the case goes to the corre3;idor or alc2.lde-mayor of tl1e province. These governors are elected annually by t:1e votes of all the married natives of such and such a village. The governor o.f I-Ianila confirms the election, and gives the title of governor to the one elected, and orders him to take the residencia of the outgoing governor. This governor, in adclit ion to the viJ.angos and scrivener (before whom he makes his acts in writing, in the languaEe of the natives of that province), holds also the chiefs -- lords of bara.niays, and those ivho are not so -- under his rule Etnd government, and, for any special service, such as collections of tributes, and assignments of personal services, as his datos and ma:1dQ.2..§.§.~ They do n.ot allow the chiefs to opr:·ress the t.imazu2s or slaves under their control. 4 The same custoiilS observed by these natives in their paganism, .a~e observed by them s~nca they have become Christians, in so far as they are not contrary to natural law, especially as to their slavery, suet. ., ., 1 awiu.L ,., 1 cessions, inlleri·t ancG, o. d op;ions, WL.i.S anc.l1 trading. In their suits, they always 2llege and prove the custom, and are judged by it, ac-::orci.i:1g to royal decrees to that effect. In ot:1er canses which do not involve their customs, and in c~i::1inal cases, the matter is deter1:1i_ned by law as arr:ong Spaniards. • • 1,.. All of these isl~nds and their natives, so far as they were pacified, were apportioned into e~comiendas from the beginning. To the royal crown were allotted those ~B1ich were chief towns and ports, and the dwellers of the cities o.nd towns; and also other special encomiendas and villages in all the provinces, -197- for the necessities and expenses of the royal estate. All the rest was assigned to the conquerors and settlers who have served and labored for the conduest and pacification, and in the war, This matter~is in charge of the governor, who takes into consideration the merits and services of the claimants. In like manner, the villages that become vacant are assigned. There are r.1any very excellent encomiendas throughout the j_slands, and t:C1ey offer many profits, both by the amount of their tributes .;:md by the nature and value cf what is paid as tribute. The encomicnda lasts, according to the royal laws and decrees, and by the regular order and manner of succession to them, for two lives; but it may be extended to a third life, by permission, After it becomes vacent, it is again assigned and granted anew, The tributes paid to their encomender6s by the natives were assigned by the first governor, Miguel Lopez de Legazpi in the province Qf Vicayas and Fintados, and in the islands of Luzon and its vicinity; they were equal to the sum of eight rcales annually . for an eatire tribute from each tributori0. The natives were to pay it in thsir produc~s -- in :.:;old, cloth, cotton, rice, bells, fowls, and whatever else they possessed dr harvested. The fixed price and the value of each a~ticle was assigned so that, when the tribute was paid in any one of them, or in all of them, it should not exceed the ve.lue of the eight reals. So it has continued until now, and the governors have increased the appraisamcats and values of the products at different tirnes, as thGy have deemed advit:able. - Tbe encomenc~eros have mad,3 great profits in col1 ecting in kind, for, after they acquired possession of the products, they sold them at hic3L.er prices. · By this they increased their incomes 2nd the ,roceeds of their encomiendas considerably; until a few years ago his Majesty, by p0t.itior.. of the r(;li3~_cus and. p:i.'essure that they brought to bear on him in ~his ~atter, ordered for this region that the nativGs shonld pay their tribute in whatever they wished - in kind or in money -- without being compolled to do othcrv-.Jise. Consequently, when they should hav<::: paid their eig:1t reals, they would have fulfilled their obligat~on. Accordingly this rule was initiated; but experience -198- demonstrates that, although it seemed a merciful measure, and one favora·,)le to the nativGs, it is doing them great injury. For, since they naturally dislike to work, they do not f.;ow; spin, dig gold, rear fowls, or raise other food supplies, as they did before, when they had to pay the tribute in those articles. They easily obtain, 'Aithout so much work, the peso of money which is the amount of their tritute. Consequently it fallows that the natives have less capital and wealth, because they do not work; and the country, which was formerly very well p:i.'·ovided and t1ell-supplied with all products, is now suffering want and deprivation of them. The owners of the encomiend2s, both those of his Majosty and those of private persons who possess them, have sust~ined considerable loss and reduction in the value of encomiendas, When Gomez Perez Dasm~rinas was appointed governor of the Filipinas, he brought royal decree ordering the formation of the camp in ManilCt, with an enrollment of four hundred paid soldiers, with their officers, galleys, and other military supplies, for the defense and security of the country. Before that time all the 3::ianish inhabitants had attended to that without any pay. Then an increase of two reals to each tributario over the 8iR:ht reals was ordered. This was to be collected by the encomenderos at the same time when they collected the eight reals of the tribute, and was to be delivered and placed in the royal treasury. There this amount was to be entered on an account separate from that of the other revenue of his Majesty, and was to be applied in the following manner; one and one-half reals for the exuenses of the said camp and ,·Jar stores; and the remaining half real for the pay of the prebendaries of the lfia:1ila Church, which his Majesty pays from his trea::mry, until such time as thei~ tithes and incomes suffice for their sustenance. Those tributes are collected from a11 the natives, Christians and infidels, in tr1eir entirety -except that, in those encomiendas without instruction the encomendero does not take the fourth pa.rt of the eight reals (which equals two reals) for hir:1self, since that encomienda has no instruction or expenses for it; but he tnkes them and deposits them in Manila, -199- in a fund clllect· "the fourths." The money obtained .from this source is applied to and spent in hospitals for the natives, and in other works beneficial to them, at the option of the governor, As fast as the encomiendas are suonlied with instruction and religious, the colJectl~n of these fourths and their expenditure in these special works cease. Some provinces have taken the census of their natives; and according to these the tributes and the assignment of the two reals are collected. In most of the provinces no .census has been taken, and the tributes are collected when due by the encomenderos and their collectors, through the chiefs of their encomiendas, by means :)f the list and memoranda of former years. From them the names of the deceased and of thos.e who have chnnged their residence 2re erased, and the names of those who have grovm up, and of those who have recently moved into the encomienda, are added. When any shortage·is perceived in the accounts, a new count is requested and made. The natives are free to move fr-0m one isla:r:d to another, and from one province to another, and pay their .tribute for tiwt year in -which they move and change their residence in the p1ece to which t11oy move; and to move from a Cliristian villaR:e tha-c Las instruction to another village possessj_ng·- it. B1.rc, on the other hand, they may not move from a place bJ:1.ving instruction to one without it, nor in t~e same village from one barangay to another, nor from one faction to another. In this respect, the nece3SE:ry ~)recautions are made by t~1e governri1ent, and the necessc.~ry :9rovisions by the Audiencia, so that this syst3rn may be kept, and so that all annoyances resu~tin~ from the moving of the settled natives of one place to another place may be avoided. Neither are the natives allo~ed to go out of their villages for trade, except by pern ission of the governor, or af his alcaldes-mayor and justices, or even of the religious, who most often have boen embarrassed by this, ~ecause of the instruction. T~is is done so that the natives may not wander about aimlessly When there is no need of it, away from their homes and settlements. 1 -200- Those natives who possess slaves pay their tributes for them if the slaves are saguiguilirs. If the slaves are ~mahays living outside their owner's houses, they pay their own tributes, inasmuch as they possess their own houses and means of gain. The Spaniatds used to have slaves from these natives, whom they had bought frora them, and others whom they obtained in certain expeditions during the conquest and pacification of the islands. This was stopped by a brief of his Holin~ss and by royal decreRs. Consequently, all of these slaves who were then in the possession of the Spanish, and who were natives of these islands, in whatever manner they had been acquired, were freed; and the Spaniards were forever pr'.Jhibited from holding them as slaves, or from capturing them for any reason, or under pretext of war, or in any other manner, The service rendered by these natives is in return for pay and daily wage~. The other slaves and captives that the Spaniards possess are Cafres and blacks brought by the Portu.5ueso by way of India, and are held in slavery justifiably, in accordance with the provincial councils and the permiss~ons of the prelates and justices of those districts. The natives of these islands have also their personal services, which they ~te obliged to render -- in some parts more than in others -- to the Sp2niards. These are done in different ways, and are commonly called the J2..Q.lO For, where there are alce.ldes-mayor and justices, they assign and distribute certain natives by the week for the service of their houses. They pay these servants a n!pderate wage, which generally amounts to one-fourth real per day, und rice for their food. The same is done bv the religious for the mission, and for their monasteries and-~ ct.urchcs, and for their works, and for public works. 4 The Indians also furnish rice, and food.of all kinds, at the prices at which they are volued, and sold among the natives. These prices are al·ways very moderate4 Th0 dates, vilangos, fisc2.ls make the division, collect, and take thesa supµlies from the natives; and in the same manner they supply their encomendcros when these go to make the collections. The greatest servi~e rendered by these natives is on occasions of war, when they act as rowers and crews for the vireys and vessels that go on the e:x:peditions, and as pioneers for any service that aris~s in the course of tllG war, although their pay and wages are given them, In the same way natives are as.signed and c1.pp0rtioned for the tinzts works, such as the building of s}1ips, the cu~ting of wood, the trade of makine; the rigging, the work in the artillery, foundry, and the service in the royal magazines; and they are paid their stipend and daily wage. In other things pertaining to the service of the Spaniards and their expeditions, works, and any oth9r service, performed by the natives, the service is voluntary, and paid b:' n:utual agreern,3nt, :01·, as hithorto, the Spaniards have 1Jorked no mines, nor have they given themselves to the gains to be derived fror1 field labors, there i3 no occasion for employing the natives in anything of t:1at so!'t,, Most of the Spa.niai~ds of the F:Llipinas Islands . . in . t h e ci. t y o.f J.V'an::i. 1\/f • 1 . + 1 01. +vile ' resiae a, r l:..e capL,a_;_ Kingdom, and where the ctie.: trade and comn1e::-ce i3 carried on~ Some encomend6ros live in provinqes or districts adjacent to Mar:.ila, whi::i.J: otA9r Sp:3.niard.s live in the cities of Segovia, Caceres, $0.ntisimo Nombre de Jesus (in Sebu), and in the town of Arevalo, where they are settled, and where most of them have their encorniendas. ,J n 1 • Spaniards may not go to the .India~ villaces, except for the collection of th'3 tri.'.)u":es wLen t:1ey are due; and thBn only ,::;he a:cEtldes-rraJor, ;::01TegiC.ors, and justices. It :J.s :,1ot perr:itted th~se t0 1·cmain continually in one settler:cent of their distri.:::t ~ b·J.t they mu$t visit as much of it. as possib~.G. T~·1oy must change their rebidence and place of abode BVery four mont~s to another c:1ief v:LlJ.a:.se ar.:.d settlement, v1here e.11 the nat:i.ves m&y ohtaii1 the beriefit of ·0hei:".'' :1rese:1ce; and so that ttie no.tives may receive as sli;;i1'.:; 2nnoy2.nc3 as possible in suppor~ing them and in the on1.inr:i.ry service that they renJ~r them. Th~ governor r:w.kes appointments to all offices. When the ,_'t):.et'm of ofi'j_ce expires, trl8' roy.:tl Audiencia -202- orders the residencia of each official to be taken, and his case is decided in ai:::cordance ti:iercwith; and until the residencia is completed, the incumbent cannot be appoint eel to any other duty or office. The governor also appoints comr.1andants of forts, companies, and other military officials, in all the cities, towns, t,nd hamlets of the islancis. Certain offices of re~idcrs and notaries have been sold by royal d~cree f~r one life, But the sale of these offices has been superseded, as it is now considered that the price paid for them is of little consideration, while the disadvantage of perpetuating the purchasers in office by this method is greater. Elections of alcaldes-in~ordinary for all the Spanish towns are held on New Year's day by the cabildo and rr~gistracy. The residencias of these alcaldes-inordinary and their cabildos are ordered by his lfujesty to be taken at the same time as that of the governor and captain-general of the islands is taken;-and they give account of the administration of the revenues and the estates under their care. However, the governor may take it before this, every year, or whenever he thinks it expedient and cause the balances of their accounts to be col:ectcd. With the ~overnor's advice and permission tl:.e expenses desired by ti.1s towns ar.e made. The city of :Manila has sufficier.t public funds for certain years, throu~h the fines imposed by its judges; in its own particular possessions, inside and outside the city; in the rcweighin 6 of the merchandise and the rents of all the shoos &nd s~tes of the Sangleys in the pario.n; and in the ?1orooo:i.3r on the playing cards, All this was cone ed.cd to tLe city by his Majesty, especir:tlly for the ex?en.ses of H;s fortification,· These revenues are spent for that purpose; for the salaries of its officials, and those o:': the agents sent to Espaiia.; and fo:t the te2.sts of tlw city, chief of which are St. Poten8iana's ~EY, 1~y nineteen, when the Spaniards entered and seized tha city, and the day of St. h.ndrew, Novernb er JO, this date on which th2 pirate Limahon ,:vas conquered a~1d driv2n from the city. On that day the city officials ta:rn out the municipal standard, nnd to the sound of music go to -203- vespers and mass at the church of San Andres, \-Jhere the entire city, with the magistracy and cabildo and the royal Audiencia, assemble with all sol er.mi ty. The above rtevenues are also used in receivlng the governors at their first arrival in the country, in the king's marriage feasts, and the births of princes, and in the honors and funeral celebrations for the kings and princes who die. In all the above the greatest possiole display is made. The other cities and settlements do not possess as yet so many sourc0s of vieaJ. th or revenue,· or the occasions on which to spend them -- although, as far as possible, they take part in them, in all celebrations of the same kind. • •• A considerable number of §_Q!Q-fi2 and junks (which ar,e large vessels) generally come from Groat China to Manila, laden with merchandise. Every year thirty or even forty ships are wont, to come, and although they do not come t0rether, in the form of a trading and war fleet,, still tl1ey do come in groups with the monsoon and settled weather, i·:hich is generally at the new They belong to the provinces of Canmoon in March. ton, Chincheo, and Ucheo (Fo .. Kien), and sail from these provinces. They malrn their voyage to the city of Manila in fifte011 or twenty days, sE:11 their merchandise, and return in eood season, before the vendavals set in -- tho end of May and a few 'days of' June ... in order not to endanger their voyage. These vessels corr~ laden with m0rchandise, and bring wealthy m:.:::rchants who own the srdp.s, and servants and factors of other r.1erchc:nts who rciLiain in C:iina. They leave China with the perJlissL:m c.=r~d license of the Chinese viceroys. and manda:--iris. T~'!e nerchandiso that they generally bring and sell to th3 Spaniards • t s o f raw ei· 1 k· in . b una"l es, 0.1..c- t-_,;~e :;: ineness o f cons is two strands (doLg_abe.£_§.§.), and otb~:i.' ;.'.::.Le of ~corer quality; fine untwisted si:k, whita en{ of c6iors, wound in small skeins; qurllltities-of vc;lv0ts, some plain, and some embroiderod :i,n all .sorts of figures, col ors, and fashions - others Nith bo c.y of gold, · and embroidered with gold; woven stuffs and brocades, of gold and silver upon silk of various colors and pa·~terns; quantities of gold and silver thread in skeins 1 n •' · . -204- over thread and silk -- but the glitter of all the gold and silver is false, and only on paper; damasks, stains, taffetans, gQ_rvaranes, picotes, and other cloths of all colors, sorae finer and better than others; a quantity of linen made from erass, called lencesuel£ (handkerchief) ;and white cotton cloth of different kinds and qualities, for all uses. They als6 bring musk, benzoin, &nd ivory; many bed ornaments, hangings, coverlets, and tape3tries of embroidered velvet; damask and gorvaran of different shades; tablecloths, ·cushions, and carpets; horse-trappings of the same stuff, and embro:i..der8d with glass· beads and seed-pear:::. s; also some pearls and rubies, sapphires and crystal-stones; metal basins,copper kettles, and other copper and castiron pots; quantities of all sorts of nails, sheetiron, tin and lead; saltpetre and gunpowder. They supply the Spaniards with wheat flour; preserves made of orange, peach, §Cor~onera, pear, nutmeg, and ginger, and other fruits of China; salt pork and other salt meats; live fowls of good breed, and very kind capons; quantities of green fruit, oranges of all kinds; excellent chestnuts, walnuts, pears, and chiCl)._iles. (both green and dried, a dGlicious fruit); quant::.ties of fine thread of all kinds, needles, and knick-knack~; little boxes and writing-cases; beds, tables, chairs, and gilded benches, painted in many figures and patterns. They bring domestic '.)uffaloes; goose that resemble swans, horses, sori1e mu.les and asses; even caged birds, some of which talk, while others sinsi;, and they make them play innumerable tricks. The Chinese furnish numberless other gegaws and ornaments of little value and worth, which are esteemed among the Spaniards; besides a quantity of fine crock3ry of all kinds; canga_nes, sines, and black and blue robes; !:.Qcl01:, 1,•fr1ich are bfads of all kinds; strings of corne~i~ns, and other beads and precious stones of all colorL; pepper and other spices; and rarities -- which, did I refer to them all, I would never finish, nor have sufficient paper for i.t. As soon as the ship reach,3s the Gouth of the bay of Manila, the "\--Jatchrt1an stationed at the island of Mirav0les goes out to it in a lisht vessel. Having examined the ship, he puts a guard of two or three soldiers.on it; so that it may anchor upon the bar, near the city and to see that no one shall disembark from -205- the vessel, or anyone enter it from outside, until the vessc~l has been inspected. By the signal made with fire by the watchman from the said island, and the advice that he sends in all haste to the city -of what ship it is, whence it has co:me, what m0rchandise and people it brings -- before the vessel has finished anchoring, the governor and the city generally know all about it. When the vessel has arrived and anchored, the royal officials go to inspect it and the register of the merchandise aboard it, At the same time the valuation of the cargo is made according to lmi, of 1-:hat it is worth in Ma.nil{~; for the vessel iJru:1edia"':.ely pays three per cent on everything to his Majesty. After the register has been inspected and the valuation made, then the merchandise is immediately unloaded by another official into. champans, and taken to the Parian, or to other houses and magazines, outside of the citf. There the goods are freely sold. No Spaniards, Sangley, or other person is allowed to go -:.o the ship to buy or trE:de merchandise, food, or anything else. Neither is it a.1_J_ovrnd, when the merchandise is ashorfJ, to te kG it from them or buy it with force and violence; out the trado mus·:::. be free, and the Sangleys can do ;,1hat they like with their property. • •• Some Japanes2 c:md Portuguese merch:mtmen also come every yeur from thG port of Nangasaquc in Japon, at the end of Octo"ucr with the north winds, and at the end of March. They enter and anchor at }'1':·.nila in the same way. The bul:: of their cargo is 2:x:cell ent wheatflour for the provisioning of Hanil2, a~1d. hig~1ly prized salt meats. 'i'hey al so bring some fine ~-Joven silk goods of mixed colors; beautiful a:1d f L10ly-decorated screens done in oil and gilt; all :dnds of cutlery, many suits of armor, spe3rs, catans, and other wea?ons, all finely wrought; writing-cases, boxes and srnc:lll cases of wood, japo.nned and curiously rnA.::.~ked; other pretty gewgaws, excellent fresh pe.qrs; burrels and casks of good salt tunny; cages of sweet-voiced larks, called f.:hmb~o_§,; and other trifles. In this trading, ~ome purcl}ases are also ma.de, without royal duties being collected from those vessels. The bulk of the -206- merchandise is used in the country, but some goods are exported to Nueva Espana. The price is generally paid in reals, although they are not S? greedy for them as the Chinese, for there is silver in Japon. They generally bring a quantity of it as merchandise in plat~s, and it is sold at moderate rates. These vessels return to Japon at the season of the vendavals, during the months of June and July. They carry from r,'fanila their purchases, which are co,mposed of raw Chinese silk, gold, de8rskin, and brazilwood for their dyes. They take honey, manufactured wax, palm and Castillian wine, civet-cats, large tibors in which to store their tea, glass, cloth, and other curiosities from Espana. Some Portuguese vessels sail to Manila annually during the monsoon of the vendavals, from Maluco, Malaca, and India. They take merchandise consisting of spices - cloves, cinnamon, and papper; slaves, both blacks and Cafres; cotton cloth of all sorts, fine muslins ( caniquies), linens, gauzes, raQ1buties, and other delicate and precious cloths, ambe:c, and ivory; cloths edged with nita, for use as bed-ses,1ers; hangings, and rich counterpanes from Vengala (Bengal), Cochin, and other countries; many gilt articles aiicl · curiosities; jewels of diamonds, rubies, sapphires,. topazes, balas-rubies, and other precious stones, both set and loose; many trinkets and ornaments from India; wine, raisins, and almonds; delicious preserves, and other fruits brought .from Portugal and prepared in Goa; carpets and tapestries from Persia and 'rl:'..rquia, made of fine s~lks and wools; beds, writing-cases; parlorchairs, and other finely-gilded furniture; made in Iv'iacao; ne edl e-~·Jorl: in col ors and in 'l'Jhit e, of chainlace and royal poin,c lace, and othe::.'"' f&nc:1-work of great beauty and perfection. Purch3s0s of all the above are made in Manila, and paid i!1. rehls and gold. The vessels return in January with the brisas, which is their favorable monsoon. They c.::i.rry to Maluco provisions of rice and wine, crockery-ware, and other wares needed there; while to Mal2.ca they take only the gold or money, besides a few special t:cinkets and curiosities from Espana, and emeralds. The royal duties are not collected from these vessels. -207A few smaller vessels also sail from Borneo, during· the vendavals. They belong to tho natives of that island, and return during the first part of the brisas. They enter the river of Manila and sell their cargoes in th2ir ves;:;els, These consist. of fine and well-made palm-riiats, a few slaves for the nati vos, s<1go a certain food of theirs prepared from the pith of palms -- and timber; large and small jars, glazed black and very fine, which are of great service and use; and excellent camphor, which is produced on that island. Although beautiful diamonds are found on the opposite co-1st, thf)Y are not taken to Manila by those vese,els, for the Portw:w.ese of Ivialaca trade for tnoti1 on that coast# These·'articles from Borneo are bought more larc;ely by the natives t:1an by the Spaniards. The articles taken back by the Borneans are provisions of wine and rice, cotton cloth, and qther wares of the islands, 1.:,1hicl:. are wanting in Born.ea, Very seldom a-few vessels sail to M9.nj_la from Siam and Camboju, 'l'hey carry some benzoin, pepper., ivory, and cotton cloth; rubies &nd sapp~ires, badly cut and set; a few slaves; rhinoceros horns, and the hides, hoofs, and teeth of this animal; and other goods. In return they take the "1t1ares fou11d in l~nila. Their coming and return is bet':.Jeen the bri,sas and the vendaval s, during the r::1onths of April, May, and June. In these classes of merchandisg, and in the products of the islands -- naraely, gold, cotton,cloth, mendrifiaque, and cak0s of white and /~llow wex -- do the Spani,qrds effect tLeir :gurche.ses, j_r:vestm.ents, and exports fo1 Nueva EspA.f.ia. 1.hey r:ia ke these as is most suitable for each p8rson, and lade -s:ir% C>ll th9 vossels that nre to ma~ce the voya>.?;2~ T~1u:- VJ.lu.e 3.:nd register these goods, for they pay into the royal treasury of Manile., before the voya?;t~, the tlf''.) ::,ur cent royal duties on exports, besides the fr3jght charges of the vessel, which amount to forty Ca.s:~~-llian ducados per tonelada. This latter is paid it the ,ort of Acapulco in l\Tueva Es.9a.fia, into thE..; ro~rE. l ·;:-,reasu.ry of the snid port, in ac1-d.i tion to thG ten per 8 ent duties for entrance and first sa1 e in Nuev3. Espal".La. 1 Inasmuch as th;_:~ ships which are despatched with the said merchand5.sG :_;re at bis Hajesty 1 s account, and other ships c2r~not, be sent, then~ is generally too small a place in the c2rgo for all the purchases. For -208- that reason the governor divides the cargo-room arr;ong all the shippers, according to their wealth and merits, after they.have been examined by intelligent man, appointed for that purpose. Consequently every man knows from his slv,sre how much he can exp'ort, and only that amount is received in the vessc~l; and careful and exact account is taken of it. Trustworthy persons are appointed who are present at the lading; and space is left for the provisions and passengers that are to go in the vessels. When the ships are laden and re~dy to sail, they are delivered to the general and the officials who have them in charge. Then they start on their voyage at the end of the month of Jmrn, with first vendavals. This t rado and commerce is so/ great and profit• able, and easy to control -- for it: only lasts three months in the year, from the time of the arrival of the ships with their merclwndise, until those vessels that go to Nueva Espana take that merchand:i.se -- that the Spaniards do not apply themselves to, or engage in, any other industry. Consequently, there is no husbandry or field-labor worthy of consideration. Neither do the Spaniards work the gold mines or placers, which are numerous. They do not engage in many other industries that they could turn to with great profit, if the Chinese trade should fail them. Thett trade has been very hurtful and prejudicial in this respect, as well as for the occupntion and farm industr:i,.es in which the natives used ·to engage. Now the latter are abandoning and forgettin::::.: those labors. Besides, there is the greet haru and loss res'J.lting from the immense amount of silver that passes annually by this way (of the trade), into the possession of infidels, which can never, by anyway, return into the possession of the Spaniards. His Majesty's agents for the government and jus~ tice, and the royal officials for th,3 rnanaP.~ement of his Majesty's revenue, are as follows: Fi~.·st, the governor and the captain-general of all the islands, who is at the same time president of the roval Audiencia of Manila, He has a salary of eight thoussand pesos de minas per year for all his offices. He possesses his own body-guard of tw~lve halbcrdiers, whose captain receives three hundred pesos per year, -209- The governor alone provides and regulates all that pertains to war and government, with the advice of the auditors of the Audiencia in difficu.l t mat-rjers. He tries in the first instance the criminal cases of the regular SJldiers, and any appeals from his decisions go t.o the iaudil:;ncia. Tl1i:~ go·,ernor t.ppoints ma;:1y alcal.des-nayo.t·, corregidors, deputies, and other magistrates, t:n oug:101;.t the isl2nds .::md their provinces, for carrying on the government and justice, and for mil.it;:1ry m..1tters. These appointments are made before a governL,ent chief scrivener appointed by his Majes·ty, who helps the governor. · 1 The gove:cnor l:i.kewise takes part with the royal Audieticia, as its president, in whatever pertains to its duties. The Audiencia consists of four auditors and one fiscal -- each of whom receives an annual salary of two thousand pesos de minas - one report-er, one court scrivener, and alguacil-mayor, ·..-1ith !1is assistants, one governor of the prison of the court, one chancellor, one registrar, two bailiffs, one chaplain and sacristan, one eXtJCu.tioner, attorneys, and receivers. The Audiencia tries all cases, civil and criminal, tal:en "co i-:; from all the pro·1j_nc es of its district. These include the Filipina3 Islands ~nd the mainland of China, already discover8d or to be disc-overed. '1 he Audiencia has the same authority as the chanchillerias of Valladolict and Granada in Espafia. f.t the same time, the Audiencia provides whatever is advisable for the proper and systematic management of the royal excheq11er. 1 His Majesty's ::."evenues in the Filipinas Islands are in charge of th£ee roval ofticials. They are apr;oint ed by his Ilaj esty, and consist o:: a i' actor, and account&nt, and a treasurer. The7 each receive an annual salary of fi_ve hundred 2nd ten thousand maravedis. 'I'hey have their clerk of mines, and registrars of the royal reven~es, and their executive and other officials, all of wh6r1 reside in r:ianil~. From that city they m3nage end attend to everything pertaining to the royal revenues thro 11ghout the islands. His Majest:r has a number of encomiendas. apportioned to his royal crown throughout the provinces of the Filipinas Islands:· The tributes of these en- -210- comiendas are collected for his royal treasury by his royal officials and the collectors engaged for·that purpose by the royal offioials. From year to year those amount to thirty thousand pesos, after deducting costs and ex9311::ies. .They colloct, froLl ono year to another, eight tto 1sE·n.d pesos in t.ritut es from tte 33.ngleys -- both Chr::_stt&ns and inf:i.C:els, 1 They also colJ.ect the fifth of all geld dug in the islands. By speci3.l conc-2s~.ion for·a limited period, the tenth is collected instead of the fiith. There is a declaratio~ concerniEg it, to the effec~ that the nati7es shall pay no fifths or other duties on the jewels and gold inherited by them from their ancestors before his Majesty owned the conEtry. Sufficient meas'..l.:ces have been taken f')r the clear understanding of this concession and its investigation, for that on which the tent:h has once besn paicJ., and the steps to be teken in the natter. From one year to another they colJect ten thousand pesos from these fifths, for much is cone e,3.led.. The assignm2nt of twc reals from each tributario inures to the royal treasury an~ is peid ~rta it, for the pay of the soldiers and the stipend of the rrebendaries. These are collected from the enco~enderos, in proportion t0, and on the a CC'.)unt of, y he:b· tr:_bv.tes, and amount annually to thirty-four tl:ousand. pesos. The finos and oicpenses of justice arc conmitted to the car0 o: the trea3u1"er of the ;r-oya1 ::.'evenues, Gnd are kept in ths treasury. They amount annually to three thousand pesos. The three per cont duties on the Chirese merchanduse of the 3angley vessels average fcrty thousand p 0 so s annually. The two per cent duties paid by the Spaniards for exporting merc~1anC.is0 ·;:,o n1kva }t::;;;,t'afia aLount annually to twenty thouse.nd peso:,. 0:1 the rnc1'cl1andise and money sent from J"Jueva };2pa.7ia to th,-:1 ?:ilipinas, result eight t~ousand pesos rrore. Conseauently, -in thase things and in other dues of less i1x6ort3.;_1ce that belong to tLe royal trea2 u'y, his Ma,jesty- receivos about one hund:ccd anc:1. fifty thnusand .pesos, or there1 -211- I about, annually in the Filipinas. Inasmuch as t:·ds amount do2s not suffice for the expenses t,l1r,t are incurred, the royal trGasury of Bucva Espaha sends a~nually to that of the Fili. • rl , . ' . " . • t pinas,. in a_QJ.Y,ion .~0 t.i-::. 2 c1,oovc re7ur:.ues, so!Ylo ass1s an:::e in money -- a jreatcr .or 1C'ss sum, as necessity requires. For his ~~jesty has thus provided for it from the proceeds of the ten per cont duties of the Chinese merchnndis8 that are collected at the port of Acapulco tn Nueva ~::::spafia, This assistance is [~iven into the lreeping of the royal o.:fic:ials in Manila, and they take charge of it, with the rest of the revenues that they manage and collect. 1 From all thi3 gross sum of his Majestyt s revenue, the salaries of the governor and royal Audiencia are paid, as well as the stipends of prelates ru1d ecclesiastical prebendaries, the salaries of the ru2gi3trat8s, and of the royal officials and their assistants; the pay of a:1.1 the nilit.Jry officeru and regular soldiers; his Majesty's share of the stipends for instruction, anC the building of churches ~nd ~heir ornaments, the concessio:·1s .and gratifica·;,:,:.:.or:s th2.t he has al lowed to certain monastu:r:.Les, 2.nd. i'.)l,i ".ratG persons; the building of large vessels for the navigation to Nueva Espaffa, and of ~alleys and other vessels for the defense of the i.slands; expenses for gunpowder and ammunition; the casting of ar,c:i.ller:,r, and its care; the oxpenso ar:Lsing for expeditior::.s and individual undert2 kings in the isla.nds, and :i.n their defense; that of navigutions to, and negotiations with, the kingdo~s in tteir vicinity, which are quite common and necessary. Consequently, since his lfajes+:.y's revenues in these isl3n~s are so limited, and his expenses so great, the royal trensurf f8lls short, and suf.f ers :::ioverty an j r:eed. The proceeds fro'.'u the ten per cent duties and the frei:~ht clrnrc;es of t1H: shi.D;:'? ".-vhi:ch are coJ.le cted at Acapulco in Nueva Es:-sx::fi2, on the nerc:hc.mdise sent there from the Filipj_nas, sl t;10ugh so Ls i':lerc::.blo, are also r.ot always suf.i'icien+; for tLe expenses incurred in Nueva Espana with the 3hips, soldiers, 2.mmunition, and other supplies sent an:r,ually t:i tho FiJ.ipinas. These expenses are c;enerJ.1J.y greatly in excess of those 1 -212- duties, and the amount is made up from the royal treasury of Mexico. Consequently, the king our sovereign derives as yet no profit from any rev(_::nue s of 1-::.he Filipinas, but rather an expenditure, by no means small, from his revenues in l';ueva Espana. Ee sust2·ins thG Filipinas cnly for the chri.stianization and conversion of the natives, and for the hopes of zreater fruits in • , • l o th er k inraoms an d provinces or hSla, w11cn are expected throug~ this gateway, at God's good pleasure. n ' 0 O ' Every year the P.udiencia av.dits the e.ccounts of the royal officials of his Iv!ajestyt s revenues, .strikes the balances~ and sends the account3 to the tribunal of accounts in IIexico. -213- CHAPTER 1'HREE ECCLESIASTICAL PATRONAGE IN THE INDIES As patrons of the Church, the Spa.nish kings claimed for themselves certain rights and prorogao:;i ves in eccJ.esia stical matters. The nature and sc:r:Je of tLese rights and prerogatives, historically known as rights of ecclesie.stical patronage, were set forth in a royal decree proriu.lgated by Philip II on June l, 1574. The decree was incorporated in the set of instructions th2t GoDe z Perez Dasm::i.r:i.fias, Governor end Ctptain Genor&l of the Philippines (1590-1593), re- . ' "oe f ore .ne se,t ou-c' .£Or +' ·1 . . cer,ea. u.ne p·nL.ippines. .!':> As may be seGn from the provisions of the order, the King of Spain or ' his representatives ::Ln t11e Indies - the Viceroy:: a:1d Governors and Captains Genera:i., had a large measure of intervention and control in mattm s of occlesiastical administra1 ' tion. The dor::ument wl'd.ch follows is a text of the royal order of June 1, 1574. 1 "The Kin;_;. To our viceroy of l\Jueva Espaja, or the p,:;rson or persons who shall, for the timo being, be exorcising the povernment of that country: _____ ___ , 1 - B.&:. R., vol. :~xr, pp. 19-31. -214- h.s you know, the ri'_jl1t of the ecclesiastical patronage beL:mgs to us throughout the realm of the Yndias -- both because of having discovered and acquired that new world, and erected there and endm·ied the churches and ~onasterics at our own cost, or at the cost of our 3ncestor;:,, the Catholic Sovereigns; e.nd because it was conceded to us b:r b-c1lls of the moot holy pontiffs, conced~d of their own accord.2 For its conservation, anc. that of the right that we have to it, we order and command that the said right of patronage l1e 2Lvo.ys presE;rved for us and our- royal crown, singly anc:1 in solidum, throughout all the realm of the Yndias, vdthoµt any derogation therefrom, either in whole or in Dart; and that we shall not concede the right of paironage by any favor or reward that we or the kings our .successors may confer. "Further, no person or persons, or ecclesiastical or .seculo.r cor:miunities, or church or monasterv, shall be atle to e.;;:ercisi:j the :cj_ght, of -oatronage.by custom privi~oge, or any other fitle, ~nless it be the person who shall ex,~rcise it in our name, and with our authority and pmver; -:1nd no y:ierson, whether secular or ecclesia3tical, and no order, convent, or religious community, of whatever state, condition, rank, and preeminence be or th2y may be, shall for any occasion 3.nd cause who.tever, judicia:::.ly or extrajudicially, dare to meddle in any matter touching my royal patronage, to injure us in it - to appoint to any church, benefice, or eccl~siastical o~fice, or to be accepted if he shall have been appointed - in all the realm of the India.s, without our presentation, or that of the person to whom we co111I'1it it by law or _by le:tters-pat0nt. He who shall do the contr.J.ry, if 2 - The bulls ref8rred to here were that of Pope Alexander VI 1501, and that of Pope Julius, 1508. Pope Alexander VI's bull granted the title and the first fr·11its of the }ndias in return for the duty assumed by the Spanish Soverei~ns of prop3.'62tin 5 the faith and 11aint3.ining t.he churches. Pope Julius grant0d the univPrsal patronage, i.e~, that of nominatin~ proper persons ±~or churches, catlfodrals, and other ecclcsi3.stical benefices and pious places. -215- he be a secular person, shall incur the loss of the concessions tl1at s11G.ll have been made to him by us in all the realm of the Indias, shall be una'Jle to hold and obtain others, and shall be exiled perpetually from o.11 our kingdoins and seigniories; and if 11e shall be an ecclesiastical person, he shall ~e considered as a foreigner, and exiled fror:i all our kingdoms, and shall not be able to hold or obtain any benefice or ecclesiastical office, and shall incur tlIB other penalties established against such by laws Of these my kingdoms. And our viceroys, audiencias, and royal justices shall proceed ~ith all severity acainst those who tbus sh2.ll infr·:Lnze or violate our right of patronage; and t::cey shall proceed offici2.lly, ei~:;her at the petition of our fiscals, or at that of any party who demands it; and :i.n the execution of it, great diligence shall be exercised. "We desire and order that no cathedral church, parish church, nonast.ery, hospital, votive chu: ch, or any other pious or r";ligious-esta.blishment be erected, founded, or constructed, ,:,Jithout our express consent for it, or that of the ·person who shall exercise our authority; and fm.'ther, ~:.hat no archbishop:cic, bishopric, dignidad, canonry, r3cion, media-r2cion, rectorial or simple benefice, or any other ecclesiastical or religious benefice or office, be instit1~ed, or appoint:ment to it be made, without our conser:t or presentation, or that of the person who shall exercise our authority; and $UCh pres eY1to.tion or consent ::,hall. be in writin 6 , in the ordinary manne1..... 1 "T':1.e archbishoprics and bisho:;:>r:::..cs shall :)e appointed by our presentation, m::ide to Ol'r very holy father Ci.:_EL:., the Ro1nc1.n pontiff) who shal:1. be at that time, as has been dono hitherto. "The dignidaaes, canonriGs, racions and mcaiaracions of all the cnthed:'al churches of the Indias shall be filled by p:..~esentntion L!B.cie by 01.u' royD..l W'.lrrant, given by our royal Council of the Indias, and signed by our nan:;.e, by virtue of' which tho arci1bishop or bishop of the chu:cch w!1ere the said dignidad, ca~onry, or raci@n shall be shall grant to him co!lation and canonical installation, which shall also be in writing, seiled ~ith his seal and signed with his hand. -216- Without the said presentation, title, collation, and canonical i.r:stallation, in writing, he shall not be given possession of such dignidad, canonry, racion, or media-racion; neither shall he accept the benefits and emoluments of it, under the penalties contained in the laws against those who v:.olnte our royal patronage. "If in any of the cathedral churches of the Yndias there should not be four beneLiciaries - at least resident, and appointed by our presentation and warrant and the cano~ical installation of tho prelate -because of the other prebends being vacant, or if appointments to them lmve been madE:) becaus() the beneficiaries are absent (even though it ~e f6r a legitimate reason) for more than ei:{ht months, until we present them the prelate shall elect four seculars to fill out the term of those who shall have been appointed as residents, choosing them from the most capable and competent that shall offer', or who can be f6und, so that they may serv~ in the choir, the altar, the church, and 2s curas, if that should be necessary in the. said church, in plBce of the vacant or abc $1t probendaries, as above stated. He shall assign them an ad.equate salary, as we have ordered at the account of tirn vo.cant or .absent prebendaries; and the said provicion, shall not be permanent, but reraoval at vvi1J. ( arl 11;utum), and those appoi.nted shall not occupy the seat of the beneficiary in the choir nor enter or have & vote in the c2.bildo. If the cathedral church has four or more beneficiaries, the p::--elatos shall not take it upon themselves to appoint any prebendaries, or to :provide a substi-c;ute in such post, wh,~ther for thnse that become vacant, o:..· for those whoae incumbents n-;ay be absent, unl~ss they shall give us no~icc, so that we may make the presentations or to.ke such measures as may be advisable. 1 -· "No prelate, even though he have an authentic relation and information that we have presented any person to a dignidad, canonry, r2cion, or D.Ey otlier benefice, shall grant him collation or canonical installation, or shall order that he be givGn poss0ssion of it, unless our original warrant of the s2id presentation be first presented; and our viceroys or audiencias shall not meddle by making them receive such -217- persons without the said presentation. "After the original warrant of our presentation has been presented, appoi~t~ent and canonical installation shn~l ·oe made vJithout an7 delay; and order will be givan to assign to hire the emoluments, unless there is some legitimate objection against the person presented, and one which can be proved. If there is no legitimate objection, or if.any such be alleged that shall not be proved, ar1.d the prelate should delsy the E.p:)oj_ntm,::mt, instal:_ation, and possession, he sha:1 be obliged to pay to such person the emoluments and ir:co:~1e;::, costs, and interests, that shall have been incurred by him. It is our desire t':iat, in the presentations that shall be made for dignidades, canonries and prebends 11 in the cathedral churches .of the Yndi_as, lettered men be preferred to those who are not, and those w:10 shall have served in cathedr2.l cr11.ffches of these s2-me kingdoms and who shall h2ve had most experience in the choir and divine w0r;:,hip, to t:1ose who sI1all not have served in catheG.ral churci1es. ?!At least in the dlistrict2: where it, can .Je conveniently done, a graduate jurist i~ gensrcl·s~uciy shall be presented for a doctor,,.il cancni~a:;e, and another lettere1 theoloeical gr~Juate in ~e~eral study for 2no"':.l1er mac;istral canor:icatc, w:10 2h:1l1 ha rn the pulpit with the obligations that doctoral and wagistr::."l]_ canons have in these kingdoms. 0 "Another lettered theologue ap,roved by seneral study shdll be presented tc read t~e lesson oZ the holy scri1)ture.s, and t;nothcr lette:cec'. j:1111.st t:1eolo 6 ue for the c&nonicat e of pe11it enc e, in acco !"L1.e'J1ce ':-Jith the estdblished de~rc-es of the holy council of Trent. The said four canonries she.11 be of the nur,:ber of those of the erect ion of the Chur eh. 11~e will and order that all the benefices, whether ~inecures or curacies, secular and re;ular, and the ecclesiastical office::: t:1.0.~ become v3.co.nt, or that, as they al'e 11.ev.1, n111.st be fil 7_od., thToug:.1out the realm of tlie Ynciias, j_n -whatever diocese :~t may be, besides those that c,re p1'ovided in the 8-athedrul churcl".!- -218- es, as stated above, shall, in order that they may be filled with less delay, and that our royal patronage may be preserved in them, be filled in the following manner: "When a benefice (whether a sinecure crr a curacy), or the administration of any hospital or a sacristy or churchwacd(;;:Pship, or the stswa:cd2hip of a hospit,2.l, or any other b-3nefic e or eccl es:.as t;i~ al office, shall become vacant, or 1;'Jl-1en it has to be :'illed for the first time: the prelate shall order a written proclamation to be posted in the cathedral church, or in the church, hospital, or @onastery whera such benefice or office is to be filJ_ed, with the suit.a.ble limit, so that thoa·:-~ who desL:-e to conrpet;e for it rnny en,~rJr the lists~ F:tom all those who thus com~Jote, cmd from all the others whom the ,relate s~all beiieve to be suitable persor..s fo::." s'.1ch of:fics or benJfice 1 after having cxamir.ed them and after havi".1.g info.rn:ed himseJ...f concerni11g their niorals and ebil::.ty, he shal: · choose \;110 p,arscns from them those whon, in the 3ight of God and his conscience,he shall judge most s~it&ble for such office or benefice. T~ r..omin2.t ion of the t1vo thus r..amJd shall b G presented to our vicer'oy or to the pr·23ic.en-:::, of our royal Jl.,,1,diencia; or to the i:,er.so11 who, in our nar:1e, shall exercise the superior government of t~e province where s~ch bcne~ ftce or o~fice shall become vacant or fuust be filled, so that he niav select one fro,n the two 2:,T1Jointoes. He sh2.ll send, that. SD1ection to the :orelat::::, so that the lattar in accordbnca with it, and by virtue of that pr2s011t.3.tior:, may g:-ant the appDintm::mt, collation, and canonical instal:ation -- by way of coLEission 2nd net by perpetual titls, but re~oveble at will 'by the p3rfon who shnll h1ve. p:'ef'entc~c: t':1em in our r:am, t0: P+hc.,., 1·•jt'1 -'-l·,., D'.'elat-" .'l•J1c.· 10"L:l re +'1ere be ._.u • u.1. .. ....., "'"_ ~-;J-• _..,_ no ~nore t17.ctn ono person ,,frw de.3ires "':-o c.:>:'!lpete for such bE:na.:ice .· or of~':ice, or the pralate s:1a2.l not find more ttan on~ person who~ he desires to raccivG the nomination to it, he shall senj the name to our viceroy, president, or governor, as 2bove stated, so that the latter may present him. Then b~ virtue of such pres. ' . , 7 rr·:ucc: .. · · ' in · en t a t :J.cn, t'ne pre 1 a-c,e sc.3..L.. t.h e arpo'.'.11tme;i:c ths for~ above directed. Brr~ it ia our dasire and ... -, 7 0 ~ ~ 1 1 "' u.!. ,_..:_u ,.J.1 will that 1,,1:L.en Lie prcst:11,'::-E,tio:1 :':'h.:1] . i be rnc.ci.e o:r us, and we s:ia:1 . 1 e:.:qn·cs13J_y stnte in our pres:mtation that the collation a:16 cq:.::.onica1 inst&lL.11::,ion sLell be by -219- title and not ½y comuission, those presented by us be always preforred to t~ose presented by our 7iceroys, presidencs, or governors, in the form above mentionec.• "And in the repc:trtimientos and villages of Indians, and in other places whero there shall be no benefice or any regulations for electing ona, or any form of appointing a secular or reJ.igious to administer sacraments and teach the doctrine, providing it in the foru above directed, the prelate - after posti~1,rz; a procla.ma~:-,ion, so t~at if there shall be any ecclesiastical o~ religious persons, or any othe~ of good mora::.s ancl education who may go to teach ·::;he doctrine at, st1cl1 village - from ti10.s.e who shall compete, or frcrn other Persons whom te shc:11 deem most suitao::1.e ~,ec~ ~~o ~9 te~~ .c.d ~~fo·rmi1 h~~s~,~ and f1"t~1·11~b ' ;:,~·1·1sll (;;. t;:.L ' ct.. lJ.~.l of their competency and go.od .charac:'c~:r. He shall send the nomination to our viceroy, president, or governor who shall reside in the provinc:e, so that the latter may pres'.:mt Ol1e of the two thus n0minated by the prelate. I~ there shal~ be no more than one, by virtue of that presentation the prel3.t.e sha::1.1 ap:;;oint llj_m to the mis3ion, g~ving him installation, as he hao to teach the doctrine. He st21:;_ order to be giv8n to such person tho emoluments that are to b9 civen to ministers or missions, ani ch&ll orde~ the encomenderos E.nd other r;eL3nLs, nnc1er ".:;he ponalt.ir~s a:1d. censures th::it he s!1ccill deem suitab:;_e, not to £.nnoy or diEiturb such pe:2son in tte e~:crcise of his duty and tho teaching of t!1u Chr:i.stian d.oc:t:r~ne; on the cont!"&ry, they shall give hL11 a,ll p:t·otecticn and aid foi." ::i..t. 'l'h.3.t appointm~nt s~all be ~ade removable at t~~ will of the person who shal::1. tav2 appointed 11im in our 1w.me, and that of tho rrelate. -- J V VY'/ ' .'.'L.. 7 ::: ~ , ___LJ,1'. Wi!J als8 1.'Jill .:md order that the rel::i..giou.s orders observe and maintain the right of patronat=;c in the following form. "First: No general, c o,mnis sary-gencral, visitor, provincia~, or any other sure~ior o~ the rcli~ious orders, sh~ll go to tho rea~m of tte Yndias, without . . ou.r roy2.J.- CO11nci. J_ o:.--. t .~e l, . -f irst s h O1,vin.:f :u1 .LflO.l,'.7.S th e powers tho.t he bears 2nd ?;j.vi:1g us r:Jlation to them; and without the Council givin6 · hini our decree and perT , • mission so that he may go, and a warran~ so that our viceroya, audiencias, justices, and our other vassals may adlliit and roceivB him to the exercise of his office, and give him all protection and aid in it~ "Any provincial, visitor, prior, guardian, or other high off::..cial, t:ho may be el 3c+,ed and nor;1inated . t l1e re,:Ln:, l , vd• i.·-~. r. • • , ·+ in o:r,, tt1e J.n .ias suaJ_..,_, iJfJJ:ore being acm.ivted to exercise his office, inform our viceroy, prss.' t , Au d'ienci2, . . , 1 nave ' • J.G.en or gove:"nor wno s ',1a.1...~ :;.n c h arge the supreme govcrnrnr:mt of SL,ch province, and shall show him his patent of n0mina~ion and election, Eo that the latter ~av give him the orotection and aid necessary for the ~~;rcise and us~ of his office. "The provincials of all the orders who arrr established in the Yndias, each one of tr..e:11, sha::.1..l always keep a list ready o: all the :nor::asteries C:tnd chief rGsidsncos (m:::::'.r.tained '.:.hisre by his orde:cs ~ and of the meniliers (resident iL each) th&t fal::.1.. in his province, and of all the ~eli3~ous in th0 province noting euct oue of them by name, togethe~ with a report of his ago and qua~:..t'ications, and t~e ofiice or ministry in wh:..ch each oue is occupicdq He shall give that annually to 0 111· vi-::::2roy, 1-~ucienc:La, or go-:ernor, or the person wl-i_o shall hc.ve c~12rge of t:1e sL:.:)rcrne governinent in the provinc r2, a i;..Fng '::.o '.) r rcrnov:i.ng :rom the list the :coli"'.):iou2 who sb-::i::.J. 03 sups:cflt '.)i.J.'3 2nd those w~o sha~l b; needei. Our viccr~y, A~diGncia, or ·gove:i.'nor·, ..3h&11 keep t:1ose 6 m1er,9. 1. li3-S.s 1r;hich shaJ.l thus be 3i vell, for h:..rns elf, ai1d in orcer t.tat ho may inform U3 by repor~ of tho ral~g~ous tha~ there are, and those of vJhom thore is ne3d of provi.:J::i_on, by each fleet s 211t au·;:. ~ 1 "The provinciaJ_s of the orc:1..ers, eac:1 one of them, shall ma 1:e a list of all the reli:ziou2 who are occ·:J.pied in ·::.eaching tl1e Christian docti'iEe to tlw Indians, and the administra~ion of sacramen~s, a::1.d t~e offices of curas in t11e vil::..a.2:es of the chief monasteries. They shaJ.l give suc:1 fist once a year to O\~r viceroy, Audierci~, or governor, who sh2ll give it to the dice esan pre}c:,t e, so t.hat he may :~now anc: und.8rst.and what persolis are occupied in tie adhlinisi::.ration of sacrame::-its and the oi'.:ic2 of curas ar.d the) e~c::1..esiastical jurisdiction, ~nd w:w are in charge of the souls for -221- whom he or must whom he to whom fare of is responsible; and in order that What is be provided may be apparent to him, and from has to require account of the said souls, and he must commit what is to be done for the welthose souls. nwhenever the provincials have to provide any religious for instruction or for the administration of sacraments, or remove any who shall have been appointed, they shall give not ice thereof to our viceroy, president, Audiencia, or governor who shall exercise the supreme government of the province, and .to the prelate; and they shall not remove any one who shall have been appointed, until another shall have been appointed in his place, observing the above order. 11 We desire, in the presentations and appointments of all the prelacies, dignidad;::.s, and ecclesiastical offices and benefices, that those most deserving, and who shall ::--1a.ve been engaged longer and to better profit in the conversion of the Indians, and in instructing them in t~rn C;hristian doctrine, and in the administration of sacrE:ments, shall be presented and appointed. Therefore we strictly charge the diocesan prelates, and those superiors of the religious orders, and we order our viceroys, presidents, audienc ias, and governors, thnt in the nominations, presentations, and appointments that they ~hall have to make there, as is said, in conformity {with this decree), they shall always prefer, in the first place, those who shall have been occupied, by life and example, in the conversion of the Indians, and in instruction and in administering the sacraments, and those who shall know the language of the Ind.ians whom they have to instruct; and, in the second place, those who shall be the sons of Spaniards and who shal.l have served us in those regions. "In order that we may better make the presentation that shall become necessary of prelacies, dignidades, prebends, and the other ecclesiastic2l offices and benefices, Ne ask and charge the said diocesan prelates and the provincials of the religious orders, and W8 order our viceroys, presidents, audiencias, and governors, each one of them, separately and distinctly by himself, without communicating one with another, -222- to make a list of all the dignidades, benefices, missions, and ecclesiastical offices in his province, :noting those of the1:1 that are vacant, and those that c:re filled. Likmvise thev shall make a list of all the ecclesiastical and religious persons, and of the sons of ci ti zGns anr::l Spaniards 1,·.fr10 are stc1dyin.:; for the purpose of tecomin:; ecclGsie sties, and o.f the good character, lea:cnin:;, comp<Jtcncy 2nd qualicj_es of each one, stating clearly his good parts and also his defects, and decluri~g, so that prelacies, d~gnidades, benefices, and ecclesiastical offices shall be suit-· ably filled, both those that shall be at present fo~nd vacant, and those that shqll become vacant hereafter. Those relatio:is shal~. be sent us closed anrl. seaJ.od, . eac,h .t'.'l oe t , Ctna. in . d.11:i.. "i:+- s111ps, 1- • • h a 11-· in eren,j ana• wb~ac·'- s •. be de8med advisable to add to or to suppress from the preceding ones that shall have been ser..t 'Ju::~oro, sh3.lJ. be added or suppressed; so that no fleE:it shall sail without its re:ation. We charga the consciencos of one and all stro.it.ly with ttis rna.tter. .J_ "In order that we may not be doceived ~Y those who come or send to netition us to 1Jresen'!:. th0m to some dignidad, b ene~:i_ce, 01' ecclesi~.:;tic3.l office, we desire, and it is our will, t/ia-t he viho si1all t!:1.us come or send appear· before our vicero:~, or before the president and Audiencia, or be:;:'ore- t;he one who shall have charge of tLe supreme gov\-3rnmen 1::, of tlie province; and, declarin~ his petition, the viceroy, A~di~ncia, or gover~or shall ma~e the rel;tion o~fi8i2lly, with information cone er:1L-1g his standing, J.earning, morals, competency, anct othei' details. After it is made, he ~ 1 rl 1• ""v sep,3.rar, ' c 1 y 1~ rom ·c-~o ' h se perso:1s. T.u1.,:e• l' s 'na..L s ,::m,_, wis e the appro7al of their prelate s~all be ob~ained, and warning is riven that those who con~ to petition for a dignidai, bene~ice, or ecclesiastical office without such investi1;ation shall no:::. be received. nw·e desire and it is our 11ill that no person can h<?ld, obtain, or oc;::npy t,,,10 dir;nidadeP., o:,_"' eccl9s:i.ast1cal benefices in the provj.nc~s of the L1dias, either in the s,J..rne o:::, in di!fE:rent churches. Therefore we order that if any one shal::i_ be p1·es ant ed. by us i' or a11y dignidad, benefice, or office, he shall renounce what shall have held pre-viousl v b efo:t·e his calla tion .s.nd appointment. · -223- 11 If the one presented by us does not present himself, within the time contained in the presentation, to the prelate who must make t.he ap:)o5.ntment and canonical installation, after the expiratioL of the .said time the presentation shall be void, and no appointment c-md canonical instalJ.ation can iJ e madB by virtue of :1. t. "Inasmuc:1 as it is our wil.l that the above-contained be obse~ved and obeyed, for wo telieve th&t such nrocedure is ex~edient for the service of Gud and for ot'.r own, I orC:.3r~ ycu -to examine the :3.bov0, and to observe anc. o'.)e:~ it, end cause it to be obcerved and obeyed in all ~~ose provinces and villages, and their churches, ir_tJ~f., and exactly D.s is con'c,1.ined and decla!'ed, for ivhat tiue shaJ.l be ov.r will. You shall accomplish and fu:'..fil i_t, :ln the WEJ.ys that shall appear rr.ost advisabl8 t:;o you. You shal~. taka for ttis purpose such measures and precautions as shal: be advisable, in v::.rtue of t~is my ~ecree; and I g~ve you for that complet2 autho:,ity in legal forr:i. - Accordingly we request an1 charge the very reverend father in Christ, the archbisho? of that city, and memh2r of Ot'r Council, and tte reverend fathers in Ch:c5.st, the arcr.tis:1op (?f Nueva EspaLa, the venerable deans and cabiido ol th9 cathedral churches of that country, anc_ all the curas, beneficiaries, sacristans, and other Acclesias~ical persons, the venerable an-i devout father.s :)l,cvincial, guardians, priors, and ot:1.er r 2l::.gi::m2 of the o:;,,ders 0 t ., n · · St • Augus·c.ine, · · · ..,. · of .0t. -~om::;.nic, ..,• .rtrc,Pcis, an'1' ot· a 7___1_ the other orde~s, that in what pert3ins to, and is in0u.mb&nt on thet:i, ·:::,hey observe r,1nd obey th::.s d8cree, acting in 1'..armony ':Ji th you, fo 2.11 ·chat s'..w.J.l ~Je ad. b,..,_e. GlV811 • • ufl.n ~ l T • t1 V1Sa ln Lorenzo C ....'"l1.8D_., uune ..f' :.Ll"S one thousand five hundred 2nd S8VE'nt:r-.f,Jur. 0~ ·c ] By 01."der of his :r.:ajesty: ANTONIO DE ERASO". -224- CHAPTER FOUR ECCLESIASTICAL AFFAIRS IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES 1. Creation of t.he Diocese of M~nila In the history of the Catholic Church in the Philippines important events took place in the last decades of the sixteen t h c e nt ury. ruary The first of these was the creation on Feb- 6, 1578, of the dioce~e of Manila. This event marked the beginning of the PhilippinrJ Hie rare hy a 5 an independent entity. Previously, the Philippines was, for purposes of ec- clesia stical administration, s ubje et to the jurisdiction of Mexico. In 1579, Philip II proposed to the Pope Fray Domingo de Salazar, as bishop of the newly crE::ated diocese. A Dominican, Salazar was at that time a missionary priest in Nueva Espana. He was fermally i.nstnlled as first b._shop of Manila on December 21, 1581. The diocese of Manila was elevated to the status of a metropolitan see in August, 1595. In that same year three new 'bishoprics were crBated - Nueva Ser.;ovia, Nueva Caceres, and Cebu - as suffragnn dioceses to the archbishopric of Manila. To fill the positions i-n these dioceses, the fol- lowing were appointed by t,he Pope on recommendation of Philip II: -225- Fray Ignacio de Santibafiez, of the Franciscan Order, as Arch. h 1\" • 1 a; F r. 1•ague~ ·ir • 1 d e B enavJ·.. d ez, a Doru.rncan, · · bis.op o .f .iarn as Bishop of !·Jueva Segovia; F'r. Luis de Maldonado, Franciscan, as Bishop of Nueva Caceres; and Fr. Pedro de Agurto, Augustinian, as Bishop of Cebu. Following is p,Jrt of the text of tho bull of Pope Gregory XIII creating the diocese nnd Cuthedral Church of Manila • 1 Gregory, Bishon, servant of the servants of God: In perpetual remembrance of t:he affair: •• ~ It is proper and nec82,sary, for the welfare of the soul8 of these natives and other like persons, as well as for tne pea:e of conscience of tb.e said King Philip, that in those islands there should be some one in char~0 of spiritual aifairs. Neither should there be wanting the prefer a~d necessarv suiritual and ccclr;siastical ,-.rnvPrnmcnt ir1 those regions, tC) the und. thc1t Alrlighby God ntay be served more faithfully, and the gosp~l liw end t~e said faith be spread and exalted tho more. After mature delibera~ion with our bratLren on ~½ese points, with their advice, and at the h~mole solicitation of the aforesaid King p~jlip, by our apnstolic authority, by perpe t,ual tenor o.c' trH,se presents, to the p::--aise and glory of the surne .i-\.lrnigh":.y God, as well as to tho honor of His ,nost glorious Mother and \-;ver Virgiu Mary .snd of all the hcav'3n-ly court, end to the e::altati.on of the afore::aid faith, we separate, ex0mp·t., and wholly relc;,ase t.he church of the city known as Manila, in th,3 sc:iid j_[~land of Luzon, as well as the city itself, and, in the islands belongin~ to it and their districts, territories, and. villac;es, all the inhabitants of either sex, all the clergy, people, secular and regular persons, monasteries, hospitals and pious 1 - B. & R., vol. 4, po. 119-124. -226- places, as w0ll as ecclesiastical and secular benefices, of '"1hD tsoe7er orders of rer::ulars, from our venerable brother the archbishop of Mexico, and from any ot:1er ecc1esinsticaJ. and diocesan prelates, under whose jurisdiction they previoucly may have been -- as well as from 211 jurisdiction, superiorsr~ip, cognizance, visit, dominion, and power nf anyone whomsoever. Moreover, by tne afo:-'ee,aicl autl1ority and tenur, we erect and establish .:;_. . orev,Jr the town of Manila into a city, and its church 5.nto a cathedral, under the t::.tle of 1rthe Conception of the same Blessed Mary Virgin," to be held by one bishop ac its head, who shall see the enlargement of its buildings and their restoration in th~ style of a cathedral church. Besides this, in it and the. city and diocE.:se he shall have the word of God preached, the heathen natives of those islands brought and converted to the ·l'lorsbip of the orthodox faith, and converts instruct(~d and confirmed in th9 same faj_th; moreover, he shall cause to be imparted to them tLe grace of baptism, w:i_th the administration of the otLer sacrar.10r.ts of the chuT'8h. In the church, city, and diocese of Man:i.J.a, ne shall. exercise episcopal jurisdiction, authority, and power freely. Moreover, in both the aforesaid city and diocese he shall now, as well as on occasion, erect and establish dignities, canonries, prebends, and other ecclesiastical benefices, both with and vdthout parochial c barge, vdth whatever else bes:Lcies may be expedient for the increase of divine worship and the health of soul of those natives. Re shGll be subject to the said archo:Lshop of Mexico, ,H1d t') :bis successors for the time b0ing, as m2t:-·o:i:ol:Lten. Moreover, hE;; sha 11 enjoy a 11 rif!,ht s as on oc c& sion shall be declared, excepting as regards gold and silver metals, gems, and precious stones, which are the right of th0 said Philip and of the Cat:1olic Sovereigns of the Spains for the time being. For this reason we 9rdain that tithes and offerings of first-fruits ,l.2..t!m=1:,t.~as), 2s required by law, need not be paid. 1vioreov2r he shall f:njoy all other episcopal.rj_ghts, the same as are enjoyed, by law OJ:' custon, by other bishops of the kingdoms of th0 Soa5,ns together with the exaction of the same as see, 'table (mensa), and other episcopal insignia and jurisdi.ction. Besides, for the future he may freely and lawfully use~ hold, and enjoy the privileger3, irn::1unit~_e::;'., i:lnc: graces which 'bther cathedral churches and their prelates in the __ -227said kingdom use, hold, and enjoy, in any manner, through law or cu3tom. Again, to tte sarr.e cht:rch of M.anila w0 assign the aforesaid people for city, the said island of Luzon and all t.he other islands for dioc c:se, c:rnd the natives flEd i:c.habitants thereof for. cl err;? ~ nd people. I-1?re07?r W(; grant, t O the same King Pn::.lJ.p power to as.s: ..~,;n, J.nc rea se, extend, le .ssc:;n, and ott2rv1:i..s e change the bounds t r:erEdn. For his episcopal tablo, (mensa), we apply and appropriate as dowry -snc y0EG'..L.yrr~venu3 of two tunrl.red ducuts, to be n£,id by King Philip from the~ yearly revenues corr~in~-r, to hir1 f ro'-11 the said if: land of Lu!0on, until the fruit. of the table itself .sh~ll reach the value o~ two hundred ducats. Moreover ~e reserve, g!'ant, cmd assi?n for-ever to tte king the right of pE: tron0ge over the churi:::h of Mani lei; and should any vacancy occur therein to present, within one year, to ' Romnn.Pon·i_J. t · f+- ror " t ,ne · 1-• •oeir.g, • t ..i.or .(' t,ne _,ime perso:1S f'. .J.· ~h~t office as bishop dnd pastor of the same church of Mani:a. We a:so grant the same right of presentation for dignities, canonrics, pretends, and other benefices, from their first erection, and thereafter as vacancies shall occur, these being similarly given to the bishop of Marila for -~he time beh:g, who shall present tr0 s&me to Phi:::.ip, or the king for the time bein1; - who, by reason of t:ie dowry and the new foundation, is-to be consulted in the establishment of these dignitaries, canonries and pretends, the apostolic coLstit~tLms, and ordinanc3s_, and ot~1.er things, to the contrary notwithstanding ••.. ,~; ~ t Ro'ne a+-V \...et • pc:-t-.·,-. t"'"-' ) on t !_ i..,e \..,c ixth U _._ ven .l G e~, :.. . clay of February in the year of tb.0~ incar:r..ation of our Lord one thousand .:ive hurdred and sE:,vf2nty-eight ,... . ~. year o;. am~ ponti1:1.ca.::.~. <,~ .L ,,_ ' '.J J. ~ 2. 0ri1in of the Privileges Enjoyed by the Friars in t h{; Ind ics The origin of the papal privileges anjoyed by friar curates is explained by the Dominican writer, Vicente de Salazar, in his Historia de la Provincia Santisirno Rosario, -228- The following passages give the historical Manila, 17 Ji_?,. background of tlh:.Se privileges: 1 Tho relig:ions who left Spain for the Indias devoted all their energies to the reductinn of the gentiles of those regions, brin/::,~. ng the iciola trous to the faith of Ch:r:i.st, and introdu~ir.£.; ~hem by m9an,s of the 1 '"' t., o r- t-.Je1p.,ism t · t. . o "· 1 ,..,, I n +h. 0.Jcram3n n1.s h, o~-Y ,..,nurc:1. '-' is -1-uas k they worked with zeal, many of th8m de7oting their lives to it. In view of the large number of infidels th2t were reduced. and of the lack at the time of seculars to ad:niniste:::' the new curacies, it was necessary for th8 religious to accept the ar:lministration of those for chbrity's s=1ke. Thjs vwrk was indeed oneroas to ther-c~Tigious, who had come to the Indias, not fur t hcit purpose, but rEither to preac 11 and to c onvort 1 . f.:. d e 1 s to our h 1 . . , • 1 - re_._ip:ion, t., h e in . o~--Y an'd t-' .,ney c .Laimeo that they were being emL&rrassed by a wark which was so foreign to their profession. Dut as it vrns not possible to dispense with the services of the reli~ious, our Catholic Monarch, D. Felipe r:, in order to TTluke m0rc tolerabll· and litz:ht the task wh5ch the religious were c~lled upon to iindertake, requested Fopo Pius 1! to -exempt the r2ligiouf of the Inciias, who were 2mployncJ in the parishes, no-swithstandinf the requirern,-::nts to th contrary of the CounciJ. of Trent, frorµ the ju:;:·isdicti.on and vir:,itation of the Ordinaries and ti1e latter's exam:i.Eation and approbstion necessary for the taking o~ this charge, and t~ ~er~it the reliGious to re;n.:-d_n, ,?ven in th2ir capacity us :ninisters our souls, urder the ahsolute ai1d f3ole ,::urisdiction of their respective superiors.2 The nt'm-oer of seculc:.1:rs later increas('d, Dnd t:1e Bishops of the Indias, seeing that the re.J~::.on for this cone ession no long1:Jr existAd, wantr 1::; 1 Manild, Qnoted in Sobre Una Re3r.!na Bisto:;:·ica de Filiu:inas, 1906. 2 - The Council of Trent wac. held at Trent in southwestern Tyrol. The Council was the 19th Ecumenical (General) Councj_l o.f the Chm'ch. It began its sessions on December 13, 1545, in the rontificate_of Pore Paul III, and closed December 4, 1563, durinp; Pope P:i us IV I s oont if :i.cat e. Its purpose WRS to state and define clearly and explicitly the posi• -229- ed the relio;ious who vvere found exerc1s:rng th0 cure of souls to·- subrr..it to th(; latter' 3 t'.:mthor':r.ty or to abandon their min:i.::.:trie$ so 't,hat these might be filled with secular priests. 1:n this way, many pariohes · were secularized, while in placea where the religious did not wish to abandon the cure of souls, tllc lattm· subrrd.tt,::d to the visitation and corrc,ction of the diocesans. 3, Incidents of the Diocesan Controversy In the following paccages, the Recollect historian, D~ego de 3ta. Theresa, ,,:iven an 2.ccount of some controversies .. which erose i.n the Philippines durin~ th0 16th unJ 17th centurias as a r0sul.t of tL(j 1_:inculin.r situation whj_ch pre~rniled i.n many parisheD 'l:Jhe2e fr'.'i.etr C'J.rOt(E'S c).&im0d imn1urdty from the jurisdiction of the dioc0san officials. are tPLen fr~m his Hi~t0rlu gen0r~l d9 l.os r0li~i0cos rtescaJ.- -----·------------ -----.~------------------------- -------· ·---...--....zos dol Orden d,2 las Errilicafios d:::l 7-r·:m Padre _vDoct,n· de lu . Yglesi2 3 'ln Ae: rn+:.in~d.e hi con;i::,:-e,o·ac ion de EE;p.:.111..1.. v d.9 la,s ,..._..;.,=._;;;....;; _ _ _~ - " " = = ---·-------------------------·~ - - 1 ---------tio~1 of ti10 Catholic Church on V[:riou:::~ point,:·; o::'' c'.oct.r:Lne onrticuJarly those contained :i..r1 the hcrer;ics 0f tht0 Froce~,tant Refon11atio11~ The Council also scug 11'G to 1J:'.'in·): ibout al:"! im. l ' . . ... . 1 ;--1 , • • 1 .. provemcnt in t 1e syst;;m o.i t1.dmEnstr::1.tJ.oTI anc. c.lC:'.? c.ls8:Lp. 1ne of the Church. It W,:rn one of thL mo,st imnortant, and most successful of alJ. tlvi Cou::ic'.Us i:wld ·o"/ the.Church. It wc1s the spearn(,ad of the CDth()l.ic Counter:~Hefo.crnatbn mover1ent. The Council of Trerr~ adoptuct, ns a ~encral ~oli~y, t:.he x·ule th3t :~JE;culur pricists shoui d tak2 c lwrp;o of parochial~ work. For this purpose, onch diocese should provide for a seminary 'i~hure yoi..1 116 · ,:ion., -wltl1 voeatLons for the prie,str .ood colfld be p::"orerly tr:1:Lned dnd prepared for service as pGrish priests in tte Jiocese. 1 -230- In_2iar,, Barcelona, 17l,J. 1 7h£ holy orders, E:ach one dojn 0 its ~3hare, declared pitil(~s.s war against paganism, and achieved signal victories in that vrar, destroyh1g tr::e idols of DAlial and plantinr soliely the health-giving sign of the cross; so that whatever is c0~quer0d in the islands is duo to their fervent Z(0aJ.. Ii'or they planted the faith, and watered that J.and vJith blood so that it might produce fruit _abundantly~ and God wa::,_ the ?ause of so wond.::.rful aL increase. The system tnat tnc;y have always followed in the spiritual nc.minictration of the missions and vLi..J.ag0s which they hav-r~ formed at the cost of their sweat is the same as t:tnt observc,d in America in the beginning by 7Rrious apostolic privileisos. In th12 prov:Lr:.cia1 ch.a:::ri~,PrS hr :ld by each order, they c1vpoint as superiors of the hcus·js established in the villages o:f Inc:i:ms who are already converted, those religious who are fit to gxercise the office of cura by th1::):tr learning, th~ir mdr&ls, ond otriE.'r quantities. The same is also done in regard to the residences of th8 active missions, where those thus appointed continue the preaching to and c or!.vers ion of the heathE;n, with very perceptible progress. Both the former and the latter exercise th0 miriir-tries to Nhich th::y Jre d0s~ tined, without n8ed of oth8r approbation than that of the definitors - who entrust tcj thesa ;-;pads of houses the administration of the sacramants and the spiritual cultivation of those souls, in the resocctive t0rritory -.,,,-h.:)rc t11e co:;_w0nt is loc.Jtt:d, a supr::t1io:t being olected for each conv0nt. This is done independently of the bii,hops. Likewise th) definit ors of' each o:::·dcr in their rneetinrs appoint various of' the inns t lt:arnc;d and experienced men, to whom is 8ntrnsted c1nd dcl ef!atc,d the faculty of giving dispensation in rEgard t~ the obstacles of marriage, and the exercise of' -othr:::c favors and privileges contained in the nontif:i.cal briefs. Those pow2rs are never exercised if the diocesans are intra dnas cU et,:1~, 2 v1dth0ut t'.1eir permission and ap0 1 - B. & R. vol. 36, p. 150, ft. 2 - Within two days' journey.--~B. & n. -231probation; and always this is done (only) in cases of evident necessity. The provinc:.i.o.ls visit their provinces annually; and th~ said religious not on:y in ~hat concerns their profsssion an~ regular observance, but also in what relate,s to tl:teir activitie.s EIS curas. The diocesm1 prolDtes 2;ppoint their outsido vicars for those territ,ories which. are in clv:re:e of the orders. They almost alwaJs clY.:lil themselves -of those same re0 J.igiout::, for that, bE:Cc:tW:38 of tho greDt lack of secular priests. The rel:Lgiou3 subm:i.t to the visitation of the diocesan in mnt::,ters touching the erection of chaplaincies, charitable works, th8 inspection of wills, and confratern:.i.t:.es that arc not exeri.pt. 'rhey resist only what includes the violation of thoir privileges gr-.1nt e:d by the supre;me pontiffs to the said holy orders for the purpose of propagation of the faith in re'3ions so distant. Such privileges, although not used in other parts of the Indias, ou3ht to be maintained in Philippines, for reasons that will be stated below. This is what has been observed from the discovery of the soid islands until the present tj_me; and the contrary has not been o£dored by tho icing as patron, by tl1e roy,11 Counc iJ. of the Indias, or by the apostolic see, although they ha7e had full k~owleJre ol the caus0. This method has been practiced, both bofare and sjnce the Council of Trent; and there hao been no chango in it -- not even since the yon,1· 165:.~, v.Jhon spt_ir.ial provision regarding i·c wDs rnnd.e for 11fo_c)VC. EmJc.fia and ?e::"u; .::md it w2s ordered tl··1·:::1t t-1',,-, mi· "'S-io·11·,~•v r"1-:g1'011C' nP ·c'-1·1,,so rn·;~ovir 1CC'S o J· '"'"~- -·- .:: .. ..._., sl1oul d rec oi ve coJ.lc.1t ion .1nd canonical 5.nst:l tutLm from the ordinaric1s of those countries, in order to continue tlv,dr exo:rc:i.G0s as curas ~ E\nd thc:rc consequent·~ ly the'' must 0uomit to the vis:i.tat.ion 8.nd correction of the bi~hops in,_9:::f ::.c iJ off ic :I..fU}Q,Q.._~Jt g1:1_0_£.fL£JJ:.I.Pr.ILan~ ma rum.·~ But ho vJ<WE::r, 'cho1 oug:hl y that \I'/,:;; s J:>lci.C: ed in exe:~c1Jtion in these kingdoms, i'c could noc be carr:i. ed unt in the Pllj_liuinas Island,s; for there even the re::i.sons which infiur-mced the exemption of tbe rtigulars are in force. .J ~ ,L ll... J. i..>"· ~ ..J .J.. ,....t.·. '-' ,._ ..... .1. ... , 1 ------. 2 - "vVhen offic:iatine; :i.t j_n his duties, and as far as relates to the cure of souls • 11 --B. &, H. ... 232- It is true that the bishops have always made the strongest efforts to subject the parish priests who nre relj_gious to their jurisdiction; but they have nover been able to s~cceed in it, for the religious are unwilling to acce,pt the cLarge with that burden. The first bishop of Manila and of all the islands, Don Fray Domingo de Ealn~ar, tried to es~ablish that subjec-i:.ion. Th(3 Ot2ervc1tine A.ug•.1.stinian fathers and the Franciscans made use of the moans which prudence dictat13d, in order to quiet their scrupulous consciences. Seeing that nothing (else) was sufficient, they rosignod their missions before the governor, as vice-petron, protesting that they would care for the conversion of the heathen, bu~ ttat ttey could not keep the parochial administratlon of those who were con7erted, wi·::.hout the enjoyment of a.11 their privileges. Thcrefor~, his Exc9lJ.ency was forced to desist from his atte~pt, as he had no scculars to whom to entrust that administration. In 1654, the attempt was made to est0.blish in Phili:?ir.as tte pract:..ce recently adont.ed in the kingdoms of Peru and Nueva Espafia by petition of the fiscal of th3 royal Audiencia. That body ordered t'.1at plan to be CEtrried out, by a decree of Oct.ober 22; anl E' inc e the chapters of the -;:-,wo p.covinces cf the order, the calced and disca~ced, were to be held in Ap~il of 55, that decree was communicatod to ttem. wjth the warning that if they were :rot obcdi2r.t t:10y wou~_d be dcpri vec:. o-: their mis s:L ons, and -+::.he rris ~dcna:~j_c s of the emolur~wnts v-.r:tic h ta d bsen acsir.mcd th,cirn fo~~· their suitable suppo,...t. All the order. 9 opp1)0ed. that change, followin.i:; logical methods in th·::;i r d2l'ense, ar::.d averse to scein~ tte necessity of abandoning their missions. But ut L1 st, as the re was no ot11nr wc:1:r, th0 venc:,i:'flble fathers-provi::1.c:'._al wer€: r''jut_,ce::i to hanajng over to the ~overnor and bishops all tte ministri.es in ~h~ir chai. . f~E::, ?o tha+., as th12 former ,,ms the vic,;-pet.con an~ the latter were the ord::\nar:~e[', :,hey might appoint v-:homever thE'Y wished to the cm·c1cies. 0 That ~esi~nation was handecl to the fiscal, and in view 1)f it, ::;_n order tha.t the most suitable provision mi?ht be made, with fnll knowledge, hti asked that writs be made.out -- first, to show how many secular clerp-y_w:2re in the four bishop:cj_cs; sE:cond, so that the off1c1 als of the royal treasury might attest -233·· the amount of t.ho stipends :paid to the religious employed in the missions, and third, so that the provincials might send. the no.mes of th,::dr subordinates en1ployed in the missions. That was ordered by a decree of Mo.y 10 in the said, year 1655. It re,sul ted that, in all, 254 relicious wcro occupied in 252 missions; that the royal treasury only paid stipends corresponding to 141 1trissionarios; nnd tha-f-:, there were only 59 suitable secular priests in all the isl~nds. The fiscal, seeing that accordinz to the report the procedure that had been taken could nqt be maintained, in order to o~viate th? inc~nve~io~ces that wa~l~ ons~e to the ~atives an<l 1nhab1.tarn:.s of the.;;e dorraranr.s J.f th,3 religious were withdrawn from the villagee, petitioned on January t-1', 1656, that v:it.hout innovation the orders be maintained in th€ missions, until it should be proved that there was n sufj~icient sup_;;,ly of secul&r pr:l.es-ts to tnke care of them; and that they be assisted with the usual emoluments. ::-le asked and char:":ed the reverend f.J.thers-provind.al to look aftor tho :::piritual adrn~nistrDt ion their accustcined: zeal. Tho rayed, Au·di~ncia having so ordered in to~o by an act of February 17, the holy orders returned very willingly to apply their shoulders to the wor.k. Those acts were sent to the royaJ. Council of the Inc:1.ias. Tbe cau..s e having been discussed there, in view of the reports of the governor (which w~;re. th:toughout favoraoJ..e to the ordE;rs J, and of the manj_f est.as present9d by the orders in justificatj_on of their rights, the doct1ments were approved on October 23, 1666, and the result wc::s to make no innovation in what had been decidid, and it cl,oes not appear that any other dGcreo was enacted a1ainst the observance and pr&ctic~ that the religi0us htve nlways mai.ntained in those Islands. ~here:ore the archbishop, having cJ.aitr.ed .that the api:1oi:1trnentr, for the missions devolved on htm by the form of c anon::i.r.al coll.9.·i;:,ion in cases where hj_s Maj e8ty d7.ci not rr:ake t'.se of the pri. vilege -w~1ich 1..:Jelon6 ed to :-dm t.iG pat:;:•on; unc: E.md.oavoring by that ID8A.ns to dep::-ive ·t11n 0rJcn·~ of the right which they po~sess oY m~king these appointments without the intervention of :-d.s E:~cellcncy; tlw royal Council by a C:ecr,cu o.f [3ept8mber 26, 16tS'/, ordor·eri that the matter be continued in the form in w11ich it had been administered until then, anci. that no change be permitted. Shortly aft er the archbishop of JIFJ.anila, Don Diego Camacho, makinp; use of ·the mo-st powerful means, attempted to subject the religlou.s to his approbation, L'f'"1 Cl:) • vis it a t•ion, arn..l.;) cor:coc t•ion 1n 0.1. o f'"'" ·: I icJ..a n do. ..Ti' or that purpose ho ha1 recourse to his iioliness, to whom tn the year 1697, he reprosent0d that there wero rr.any religious in the islands employod in more than seven hundred pElrishi:is, ·v~ho hod ref-i.1sHd 3nd. werrJ refusing to rer::eive the vioitation and. corrc:ction of the diocesans; and he asked thot they bo corr~0iled to receive such visitA.tion. U;iun seoing thclt, his l:-IoJ.iness Cle:11ent XI • . d (, J Bnuary 30, 17"5 • d ccJ.ac ·..1 ;I that t.h e rixnt 01 v:1.s1 t inG the parochial regulars bc3:;_or.i{ed to th8 said archbishop and othe:c bishops; but 1:rn mado no mention of tho other poj_nts ".:Jhich h::,d been referre1 to him, and ·which were aloo under dispute, This appears f~om the brief despatched in this regard, This brief havinf been presented in the Gou.ncil of the Inc.ias, it appears that j_t 0 0 0 0 O 1 " • • was confirmed on April 22 of the s~me year, The said archbishop ordered :l.t to be executed (October 26, 1707) wi~h the rros~ strenuocs efforts; but he encountered in this such dissensions and dis~urbances that it iu con~ sidf;r-ed advis,1ble t0 omit ths :relation thereof, I~ was nece3sary tc r8s:::.gn the ministries onco moro, the suporiors (of tte orders) protesting tha~ they wou.ld never agrPe to sud1 a subjection, a11d that the archbishop could make appointm8nts to tne curacies ~she wished, By that means ·his ExC8llency was so balked that, the cause having been fully p~oved, tto evidence received, and the proofs adduced to both oortieDj the petition int.:1'.',)r!uced by the ord(:lr' iAJ-9.S allo'v8Ci on N!arch +~n nnno~c~r 7J of'f·1·3 0 ,~10·~. anrl ~t ~~ 0 01~dnr~d +'n°t C.l ' -- :) ' ·. --· J 'JV<.A.1.1 1,,.,. ,._,_, ,.J ciaJ. st:J.terne.1t:..: te :,).ven them, .J.l.L~_; ...,,...._, ,i:,:i...,.~. The authority of the governor was interposed extrq-judicially 1 2nd he ordered thc:,t th:J reJ.igiou;3 rho~ld ccc'.1py t:·1(':l abandoned curacies, nnd tL2t therG r:;houl.d be no ch:mg;e, The archbishop hirnf,elf, v/Lo h&d put forwer-d ::;hat cla~.m, was oblip;cd to confGSE:- thr.1.t hu cou:::.d not put it into practice, · -235- CHAPTER FI'JE THE EARLY PRO'!IrJCES An unsigned documo1rt, written about 1618, tells of the provinces then existing in the Philippines, together with the number of resi.dants in those provinces and the manner in , which they were administered.An earlier source of information on the political and administrative divisions of the Philippines is Bishop Domingo do Salazar's Cartao de :ndia§_ (15fs5). According to that account, the terr:!.torial divisions of the country at that time were as follows: 11 city of Mani.1a, la Panp2.ngn, Pangasi- nan, Ylocos, Cagayan, Carnarines, la La:~una, Bonbon y Balo.yan," and the following islands, ncebu, Oton, Marinduque, Lubnn, Mindoro, Ymaras, i3E•. ntayo.n, i'Jogros, Pan1y, Leyte, Bohol, Mindanao, Ybabao, Cati.mduanes, Mas'bate, Ca_puJ_, Burias, Banton, Comblon (sic} 2 S:Lrnara, Sibuyan, Isla de TabJ_as, Cuyo, Luban. 112 ~ In 1663, according to Colin,.,. of the Philippines were: 1 2 mo de las 3 - the pol:.i.tical divisions Hl\1anila and its neighborhood (su B. & R., vol. 18, pp. 93-106. Q11ot ed by Retana in his edition of Zuniga, E§tadi 9_.L~las Fili nine.~, vol. 2, appendix C. QF2. • £11. • -236comnrca), Bal ayan or Bombon, Tayabas, Carnarines, Al bay, Cagayan, Ilocos, Pangasinan, Pampanga, Bahy (Laguna), Bulacan, and the island of Catandu.2nes, Masbate, Burias, Capul, Ticao, Marinduque, Mindoro, Luo.s,n, Babu.yanes, Parag 1.1a, Cala.mianes, Cuyo, Panay, I::'naras, Samar or Ibatao, Ley'.::,e, Bohol, Cebu, Isla de Negros, oantayan, Carnotes, Isla de Luegos (3iquij6r}, Mindanao, Basilan, Jolo." The t e:::t of the 1618 document is , in pa rt as foll ow s: T:1e governE1enta.l district of the islands commonly caJ.led t:be P 1~1ilip:9ines cornpris es seven pr~_ncipal provinces, r:..ot to n:ent icn r:iar_;_y other i.sla:1ds and . . t . . t . . sma 11 er provL1ees ,n:L1,L1 i s JurlS·_,1_lC ion. .c...,, -:i.ve o_._f' these prir.ci:;_Ja~- rrovinces are ir:. t 11e isla:1.d of Lv.zon, which is four b1ndrod and six~y legu2s in periphery and extenC:s abot1t f:con, -si:1e thirteei.'lth to tl:.e twentyfirst parblle~. ••• · 1,, • • ,..J • CANIARL{SS The first of the five proiinccs in the island of Luzon, bei~Dnin3 en the eastern coast, is Camarines, which incJ.udec, all the te:..-ri·:::,o:;:':T n~c:.::.r ·c 1-t2 DLouth of the, charrnel Dl Ca:Ju~-. 'l':1e CJ.pita::_ cf '.Jaccrinos is :::'.'l.r~"' S c•i'x-'-R;r 7J-.9ol._,a. -~ ,.,..,.s -'1-n . . ,r:!.""tl..i....... ~, . . . . It:v th a._, ci"t·-r J C-·-f r,,-.rVCl.4-!.b c, ..... ~c,.1.,. . ...J..cta was set 01Bci oy Doc":-.or Francisco cl.e ,c1e.n d-c>; gov2rnor of these islands, in fiftesn hundred a~d se70r~y-four. He settlLld on the Vicar, a large and pe~ceful river, whose waters are ve1-:y fresh and healthf'~11 1 beco..use it runs throw;i;h n:any veins of gold, as do most or all of the rivers of these is:ends. There are in Carnarines as many as twenty 2ncomiend2s, cotmting the four into which the island of Catandvanes (which is . , d 8 d ln . +uilJ.S ' . d lS~r1ct, . ' . ' lS . QlVl, ' . . d e~. T..118 La1~8Sj t 1nciu of these enc:)rniendas does not contain moro than fifteen hundred tributes; there are a few of one thousand; while most of them rn1rnt have f::."om seven to eight i..:. .l-\J:.' ('I~ 1 ,..J -237- hundred; while some have four hundred or even less. Among these people a great deal of gold was formerly obtained from the mines or placers of Paracale and from the island of Catanduanes ••• , It is believed that as much gold is mined now as usually, yet it seems a small quantity; for although the Indians in p;eneral have f!;Ore L,oney than form(:}rly obtained through [.variou§_/ sources of income, they keep back the gold to work up into chains and j ewelry, with which they adorn and parade themselves freely. • •• The number o.f the inhabitants of this province may be but roughly estimated, as it is difficult to count them accurately. It is probable, however, that there are more than one hundred and fifty( thousand), counting the intractable black people who live in the interior of the cour.try. Of this number some estimate that one-fourth are Christians - Judicia2_ offices o:(._the_Q£ovince of Camarin_§.§.. With respect to royal jurisdiction, this pr~vince has these three offices: The alcaldia-mayor of Caseres, which is ordinarily called the alcaldia-mayor of Camarines, because Caseres is the capital of the province, and has jurisdiction over the larger and better part of it; the corregiri1i9nto of Ybalon, which is at the mouth of the channel; and the corrigimiento of the island of Cata~1duane2, whj+h is also near the same channel mot:.th .'+ THE PROVINCE OF :MANILA The second province (in the island of Luzon) and the principal- one in importance and wealth, be- -----·1+ - Morga in the account previously cited wrote that the islands ••• are governed from l½a:1ila. by means of alcaldes-mayor, corregidors, and lieutenants, each of who~ rules and administers justice in his own district and province." It mav be inferred from this statement that tl1e "offices" referred to in this document were distinct ,and separate political and administrative units - alcaldias (provinces ruled by alcaldes-mayor) and corre,£!imientosl·administered by correg:idors ·• ) · ~-11 · -238- cause of its extensive commerce and of the fact that it is in the cent er of the kingdom, is Manila. Within its jurisdiction are inclurl.ed o~her sm2.ller provinces. These are the two lake provinces Bonbon and Bay; and (the most important of al:;_ Panpanga, which, at the outside, i3 not more -t:-han twelve leguas from .Manila. • • • In Pcrn.:r,a!lga your r,Iaj ecty has as many as six thousand tributes in the :':'oi.;r '.1'.overnrnfmtal dis1 ch are Beti"' 11-'j.- ,,1'n·_.___ s.mo ~.F")I' tr icts a1-1d p.,,...:nr'J·pa, v-;-.,aC?o·· ..i..,J_.J..cvC>~UCIJ Lubao, Guagua, Mexico, and other sialler places. All the neighboring country, and partiet'.larl:r the royal magazines, se~ure their rice from the province (of Panpanga). ':"here must be in the province of :Manila forty thousand tritiutes belonging to pr:Lv2te individuals, and almost twenty thousand belonging to your Majesty. There r,mst be in all more than fiV8 hundred thousand peop:!.e, of v(ho!!1 one-fourt-h are Cririst::ans. In ttis, however, est ima"'.:. es vary. The a delantado, Miguel Lopez de Legaspi, settled the :i.mportctnt city of Eani:1.a in tte yeer fifteen hundred and sixty-one, after havinJ lived for six years in the islands of Zubu a;:1d F,.=uay, of whicl:i. I s i1all speak more in detail ·in another place. _._ -"· .1...J..1.-.., . ..J_ The judicial offices in the nrovince of r~ni.la.The off:i.ce3 to which a~JpointmE:nt3 &re wade i:;:1 the • ·1 a, no-;;• t o ~11ent10n · • t'ne Jnc:..1siaJ. • -• • ., 01.1.inr,.• province 0.1r, 1'1. .,;,.nL cers of gre-'1ter or less irr::!Jo::-tc:nce who a::-e ua:!.ntained by the city within its ·walls, a.re as follows: The alcaldia-mayor of the Pa~ian ot al~alzeria of the .Chinese; the alcald:i,a-mayor of tlie coast near this city, its capital being the town of Tonda; the aJ. cnldia-ma:ror of the Lake of ffanil2., ordinarily called Lagui1a de Bc:.y; the aJ.cc1.ldia-r1:ayor of BuJ.acan and Calumpi.t, one of the two 2lc3.lf'.ias of Panpan1s.'J.i the alceldia-mayo~ of Panpa~ga, ~hich includes thG rest of tte province; the alcaldia-mayoT of Belayan and Bonbon, twenty le;uas from Manila; the corregimiento of Mindoro und Baco, twenty-five leguas from Manila -- which, although i~ is L:;relf an isJand, is a division of this provi~ce fer ju~ici~l and religious administration; -:: , he ale al dia-mayor of Calilaya 7 5 5 - Tayabas, now Quezon Province. forty leguas from Manila; the corregimiento of Masbate, an island fifty leguas or a little more, from Manila,. between this island f of Luzon), and the Pin-~ ta dos. 6 PANGASINAN Next after Panpanga comes the district comprising aJl Sambales and Panis.'lsinan, This, althoughthere considered as a separat9 province, is under the jurisdiction of 1V:ani1a in jud::.cial and r9ligious matters. • •• Ten tl}o1.1sE.nd tr.:fc•.1t e.e.• - There must be in Pangasinan between ten thousand and t¼e~ve thousand halfpacified trP)utes, two thousand be::..or.ging to his Majesty, and the rest to :!Jl~ivat3 indiv~dt..alo. 7he capital of this province is a p~ace called Binabatonga.7 It formerly containec. about tnree thot;_sa:1c: ho 1.1ses, or, according to other esti~ates, a greater nu1fuer; but it now l'1as 0:11:r a-')01.1.t tvw tho•.1s2nd. The province has some good ports. On0 is that of Agoo, ·comn::.only called "tb.e port of Japon, ,; bec&us e it was the first port which the Jaoonsse occunied in ttess islands (when our people tirst saw them tere). ALot~er port is Bolinao, w~ich is better t~an any other. Judicial offices in Pan.2:risinan.- There is only one judiciaf--oi'fics :.n t:nis namely, the province, al cnldia-mayo:· of Pangasinan. 'rl-IE PROVINCE OF :ILOC03 Next after Pangasimrn, toward tte ;10rth, on the same coast, comes the province of !locos, a ~sople on _____ , ___ ,...__ 6 - In ref,3rrin~ to tn(-') "Prov:i.nc-3 of Mardla, vi the author must hwve had in mind t :.-ie diocese of K:m:na, :::'or there was no ~uch p:rovin;::e at that time having '::,~10 2re1. and juri,sdiction indicated in the documGnt. 'l'l1e diocese of Manila., however, embraced the alcaldias and corregir.d.entos enumera't,ed in the document as being comprised i~1 the "Province of Manila • 11 7 - Binalatongan~ -240- the whole more settled and tractable; and although there have been some disturbances among them, they are now very peaceable. They are well supplied with provisions, especially with rice -- a great quantity of which coi11es to lv,anila every year during February and a part of March, for at this time the winds are favorable f'or ,<2:0:x:.2: .frort Ilocos to Manila and back ag::iin. Tbe car;j_tal of t h::_s ::_:)rov ince is the town called Fernandina (~ow Vif&n), which was settled by the master-of-camp Guido de La 1e7;ar~t,, who governed these islands in fif'~een hur:.dr9d and seventh-three, upon the death of the adela~~8do, Legazpi. This province must have bet1,veen fo1-1rteen thousand and fifteen thousand tributes, which are collected without resistance. Five thousand of them bGJ.ong to his r,:ajesty, a:..,.d the rest to private individu-3.ls. There useci to be i:1 it, aiso, D. great quantity of gold tut the Ygolo·:::.es Ind:_ans cirr:in:;..shed the amount for the :ceason given above. 1his is quit:.e noticeaole. 0 ' • __ 1 o..Lr:u~.f:.§. +"' . " t' . 9 n.:r,2.v1nce ' · o:,-,., Tl J u rl,ic1a __g_L:£ ~~_Q2..,C~.Q.- There is in this pro~in~e only one judicial office, the al caldia -ue yor of L.o cos. , nro\r~nco~ 0- ~+~ _,..,~_ .._., ,..,,..ran 0"\.., -\T--.A"8 ~.,nr::·o'Ol•"' v ~~£,;..J.._c,, __ ;,._},';_;;;;;_ '.~-~-.!:~ -::J;.;..., _:_c:i Af·'-AI I ocos ori1 1- e~U 1u-he __J1·.-,o···,~1·'P o,.P ('.·.,c·a··v.·11·: i-.i....e ll_, J'-·~·-, v.:.1 no:cthernmost ;_)Ort ion of- the islanj of~Lu'.::;or:, WhE;re there is a groat deal of incompl et, e: 2, pac:i_fied coun· try. It contcdns vj_llages in:i-:tc,.tic-:;d by a ve'i.,Y strong and -wa:clike people, who tava given us much troutle. The ~ - ~ - ' , _._-- 1 7 -L 0~ $ 1 V...J....-.•~-· ...1.. .jc,~ .. Twelve thousanf (~ribu~es)Q- Between twelve thousand end -:~hirteAn tr:i_LL,1tes are cc·ll<;cted in the pacified portions o:~ t:1e province. Fit'·'~ecn hundred, or D. little mors, telo 1.1g to his Majesty, and the res~ to private individuals. The ca9it2l of this province, is, as has been said, t~8 city ahd port of N~ava J3gobia, opJosite and facingi China and Japon, 011e hu.·1d.J ec. and ~wenty leguas ::'rum I,Ianila. It is so r>8ar' CLina tl:.at from Cape Bojeador) one of the points or pr,:,rnontories of Cagayan, it is not nore than a seve11ty 1cwuas 7 jo1uney to the near~st towns on the coast of Cinchoo, a ·-241- maritime province of that great kingdom. The greater part of the Sangleys who come to these islands are natives of that place •••• Nueva Segobia contains the cathedral church and is the capital of the archbishopric of the province of Cagay~n, just as the city of Caseres is of Caraarines. There are then, in the island of Luzon, no~ counting the archbishopric of Manila, which is the capit2,l of the kin:::;dom, the two archbishorpics above n~ent j_oned. It must be noted that there are in th::i.s island nany races and kinds of people, such as the Camarines~ Camintanes, Tagalos, PanJ;angas~ 3_anb~les, Ilor:;os, Csgapmes, and many others. JurliQ..if1J. offices oj'....,:tb,e pr_g_y__in.9e of l'Jileva Segobia. - There is only one ju:i:i.c ial office in Cagayan, the alcaldia-rnaj·or of the entire province. THE PROVINCE'OF PANAY IN THE PINTADO$ The sixth provinr:;e, one of those outside of Luzon, island of Panay, s:i.tuated in the Pintados, one hundred leguas sot:th of t::1.e city of Manila. It is more fertile and yields more rice an-<i o'cher p:rovi3ions, than any other province of the kingdom e~-::cep0 Manila. , Neither is there any province rel:itively r,1ore densely populated, for, although it is no0 eightJ l2guas in .,, periphe~y, it contains thirty thou3ard ol th3 most profitable and peacoa·;:Jle trit:)1_.:(cEcs ::.n tha whole kingdom. The canital of this is:2nd is the town of Arebalo, wnich was settled by the ad 3lantado Lega~pi in fifteen hundred and sixty-seven, and enJ.&rged by Don Gonzalo Ronquillo in fi:E'tE::en hurdr0u ai11 eighty-two. It is near the village o: 0":.on and t te :port of Yloylo, the most southerly port of ·the gov:arr_me.1'tc.l district. For this reason, and becEmse o:: the feri:-i.:;_ity of this province, it is better fitted than any other for provisioning and s e11ding aid to the Ma.lucas Islands and to the presidios of Terrenate. T~is prov• • , +' • t owa.rc, .,.vnnc.an.J.o, ,tr • , ]\f" 1.nce 1.s on tne co3.st orn ~aci:1,~ iialuco, and a 11 the ·1 :islands o:f enet1::._0,s, n ;:, s t:1e islan~s to tte sout~ are de2ignated. ln religious instruction and eccJ.GsiasticaJ. ju:c"isdiction, this province is inclu:-led in the bishopric of Zuou. 1 -242- Judicial offices in the island of Panay.There are inPanay three jujicial offices. These are the corrigimiento of Panay and Aclan _principal settlements of the island; the corregimiento of the island of Negros, which is included in the dis~rict of Panay; the alcaldia-rhayor of the town of Are[?alo (commonly called the alcaldia-mayor of Otong) and including the purveyor-ship -- the best and most important office of that province. THE PROVEICE OF ZuBU AND IT3 JURISLICTICN Forty leguas eastward from Oton, and one hundred and twenty leguas from thA bay of HaLila, is the is1&nd of Zubu. The capital of ti1is prov:i.nc"'J, as well as of all the provinces of the Pintados, is the city of Santisimo 1Jombre de Jesus -- celebrated throughout the kingdon, not so :r.1.uch on account of its good harbor as because it 1-:as the first town to subr.1it to his Majesty; and because it. is the first city which the adelantado Eiguel Lopez de Legazpi sattled 2nd pa~ified in those islands. It is also noted hccause • b i.l.t .na..L.1 • ,~ E, 1.e.:::;u2 1 :-or: t:.1e is .ana. en .ho c-.::.an, 1't is where tne famous I1ta2:alla;.1es died fightirni:; and more than all else o~ a~;ount of tho holi rel{c, (an image) of the child Jesus, uhich our ~athers found there, which is now at the capital city in the convent of San Agustin, and has teen signalized by ao~o miracles that have occurr(;d there. Zuou is n small islan,j, and it yields hut few provisions, b,3csuse it is :cngged &nd mourtainous. B-.1t it h2.s an abundance . of game, and secures eufficient (of other) provisions and st,....-ppli8S .from the island anJ. provinces under its jurisdiction. These are: L:)yts, Cc:-.rnar, Ybabao, Boholj and 1i12ny othe~ isla:10.s of lesse:;_, Lnportance, besides th&t part of th8 island of Mindanao opposite Zubu wh:i.ch was formerly at peace -- that is, all the cou1:.try alonr; the Butuan River, fo::.~ty l·,3guas from Zubu, &nf the coasts of Surieao, Dapitan, and. Caragas, a little further f.;.~om Zubu. • •• ~ ~ 1,., •] • ,, T• • lludic:i.cs.l office8_9f, \j1e_£rovinc9 ,of '7,u~:iu_; thr~,Return::i.ng to the province o:Z' Zu;YLl., from v1hich I 11ave been diverted by a discussion of the aff2irs of Minda- -243- nao, I may say that there are three judicial offices here. They are the a.lcaldia-mayor of Zubu, which is the principal office in the province; the corregimiento of the i:::;lc1nds of Leyte, Carnnr, and Babao: and the corregimiento of :Sotuan, which is the portion of the island of Mind2nao that used to bo peaceful. Summary of the tributes --160,000. bute consists of a man and wife. Each tri- I wrote this in Manila, in 161$, to give to Governor D. Pedro de Bivero. -244CHAPTER SIX SPANISH COMLERCIAL POLICY IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEEHTH CENTURIES 1. Laws Regarc.ing Navigation an·:i Corr:.merce The following B.re s'..lmmaries of some of the laws enacted by the CounciJ. of the Indies neoncerning the navig;:ition and cor,lIIlerce of the Philip-pines, China, Nueva Espana, and Peru.n They are taken from the Reco·0ila_cion de Ley_,3s de los Reynos de las Ind:1.a§., lib. IX, tit. Y:X.XV. From them one may get a. gaod idea of the charac~er and tendencies of Spanish commercial policy toward tr:.:e Philip9ines in the six- , teenth and seventeenth cen-suries •..1. LAVJ XXXJ! It having bcien co1nr11itted to, and charged upon, the Governor and captain-general of the Filipinas that he should endeavor to intro due e, in the exchange and bartE::r :for the mercr.andise of Ctinn, trade in other products of those isl&nds, in.order to avoid, when possibla, the withdrawal of the grgat sums of reals w:1ich are taken to .foreign kingdo:i1s, t}1e governor executed it in the form and manne:c that he considered most fit,ting; end a method called pancada was introduced, which has been observed and exe-cutect l - B. & R~, vol. XVII, pp. 27-50. T1:ie laws here enumerated were included in Title 45, not Title 35, as erroneously stated in Blair &:, 7~ober~son. -245until now. It is our will that that method be observed and kept, without any change, until we order otherwise. (Felipe II - Afiover, August 9, 1589; Toledo, January 25, 1596). LAW LXVI We order that a duty be collected on the first and subsequent sales of all the merchand::..s e shippE:id from Filipinas to Acapulco, and the pesos per tonelada on freight accordir~g to custom; for this sum and much mor·e is neE:ded to pcly the troops, and equip the vessels that engage in "'.!ommerc8. In this there sha11 be no innovation. (Felipe II -- Ahover, August 9, 1589). LAW V We ordain and order that there shall be no permission to trade or traffic between Peri, TierraFirme, Guat e:;iaJ.a, o:"' any other parts of t Le India.s, and China or tLe :Filipinas Islands, even thow~h it be by license of the vi~eroys, audiencias, governors, or magistrates, under penalty of confiscnt:;.on of the merchandise t::1c1t shall o e shipped. The masters a'nd pilots shall also incur the confiscation of all their property and ten years in the galle-/S. (Felipe II -- San Lorenzo, Decen0sr 18, and February 6, 1591.) LAW VI It is Ol!r will that t h'3 trade and corr;me~ce of the Filipinas Isla:ads with Nueva Espana 'be carried on .for the p!'esent e.s ordbineri. Un..:ler :1.0 co'!.'1s7.deration shnll t!1.e amount of merc:1andise s1-:ipred arnm:111 v from thosJ islanC:s to Nueva Esoafia ex8cr:~d t'.JO hundred and fifty thousanc. eight-real piS!ces' nor the return of pri::-icipal and profits in ooney 1 the five hundred thousand :9esos i-Jhich a,:e pe:..·mitted -- unde:;." no pretext, cause, or argument tha~ can ·oo advm1ced, which is not e::pressed. by o lG.W of this t:'..tulo; and the traders shall necessarily be citizens of the Fi- -246I lipir.as, as is also ordained. (Felipe II -- Madrid, January 11, 1593, Felipe III - December 31, 160~-; Madrid, May 4, 1619; Lisboa, September 11+, 1619). LAW LXIV It is advisa~le for our service to have constant records on what. pa.sses in the trade and commerce botween the Filipinas and Nueva Espafia, in order to ascertain and discover whether it continues to increase, and what kinds of merchandise are traded, their prices, and in what money or materj_al, Accordingly we order the ''Jiceroys of Nueva gspafia to send to our royal Council of the Indias in each trading fleet, a copy of the registers that the ships brought from those :Lslanc:s, and also of those of the ships sent thithe~; and all shall be made with great distinctness and clearness. (Felipe II -- lYiadrid, January 17, 1593; and Toledo, June 9, 1596,) LAW 1xv:rr We declare and order that the Chinese merchandis8 and artic1es which hc'..'tve been and s~aJ.l be shipped from Filipinas to Nueva Espafia, 'can and shall be consumed thf:;re only, or shipped to these kingdoms after paying the duties, They cannot be taken to Peru, Tierra-Firme, or any other pnrt of the Indias, under penalty of confiscation of all those found and apprehended in the possession of any person whatever, and shall be applied to our exchequer, the judge, and the denouncer. {F'elipe II -- Iv~drid, JEmua:ry 11, ·1593; Felipe IV -- l\lfadrid, Fe:Jruar:, J_O, 1635), LAW I In.::i.smuch as :Lt is acvisable to avoid trade between the West Indias and Chinei, and rer-;uJ.o.t e that of Filipina3, ns i'i.:, has :i.ncrensed considerably, thus causing the decrease of that of trwsc k:Lngdo:ns: therefore, we prohibit, forbid, and ord8r, that no person of the nt1.ti ves or res ide:mt s oi' Nuevet Espt, .fia, or any 1 -247- other part of the Indias trado or be allowed to trade in the Filipinas Islands. Should anyone do so, he shall 1.ot)e the I]lerchanclisc with which he shall trade, and it shall be applied, one-third each, to our royal exchequer, the denouncer, 3.nd the jude;c 1-vho shall sentence him. In order to show favor to the citizens and inhabitants (of Filipinas) bnd that that trade may be preserved to sufficient extent, we consider it best that they alone muy tradu with Nm~vo Esp.:;.fio., in the manner ord&.;i.ned by the other 1mv.s, 1;1 ith this provis ion, that they convGJ their ?Ood::::, or si.::nd them wj_t,h oer.somi who si.-iall come from the SJ.id islands. They cannot .send them by way of commission or in n.ny other form to thooe who 2ctually reside in Nueva Espafia, ir.i. ordor to 2void the frauds of consj_gning them to other persons -- unloss it be because of the denth of those who should come with the good:J from the soid islands; for in such case it can be done. And we ulso order that the inhabitants of Filipinas cannot consign their merchandise to g(merals, com1:1arlders, captains, offici2ls, soldi0rs, or sailors of the vessoJ.s of that commercs, or of any other vcsselc, evcm though these be inhal:Jit,rnts of the said isl.::mdr; as well as the pcrson:3 a :Jove rn.ent ioned. ( Fel ipo II -Madrid, J'anuary\ 11, 1593. FeJ. ipe IV -- Mndrid, Feb ... ' ruary 1 0 , 1635;. LAW XXXIV We orde:r and co1:D1and that no pe:rson trc1do or traffic in the kincdoms or in any port of Chinn, and that no good,s be shipped from that kingdom to the Fi~· lininas Islan~s on the account of the merchants of th~se islands, The Chinese themselves shall convey thej_r .12:oods c..1.t t hoj_r · ovm D ccount and rL1 k, and E,ell them there by vJho::;.os::ile. Thu gov..:irnor ,wd cA.ptaingeneral with the council of tho cit;: of I'Ianil.'1 shc1ll annually appoint two or thres persons, wtID~ they shall deem best fittod, to appraise tho value and worth of tho merchc.1ndisc, 3.nd shall tal:e the g:ood:3 at wholesale from the Chinece, tu whor;i they shall pay the price. ~f.'hen tllcy sholl distribute it 3.incrng all th0 citizens and nntives of those islands, in ~ccordance witl·1 the·"r c•Yp-it·,1 <'() ,!-·}1·1t ·t,hu·,v Lilr1·-·,. .J.... C.J ~Ll'I,-~ c,hcH'O in thu interest D.nd prof i ;:-, that E..1ris 1)s f roi11 this t;ro.l'fic and .I Cl._ ,._ (:.I,. ' ~ \.J~ .r_ .) .,/ . ~ 1.) -21+8- tr1de. 'rh(} pGrso:rn thus appointed :3hal1 1:ecp n book, in vrhich they :~hCt 11 cnt er the c.:i1110:.1nt of. money inv~3st ed un eh t ::.me, the price at which c::u.~h clcJ.ss of mercha9dise is valued, among what per3ons the merchandise: is clividc!d, ::.111d the ,Jrnount t}10.t fo.11s to the .shnre of each. The govnrnor shall take p.1rticular oains to ascertain and ~iscover how the said depnties· rnake use o:c i~hcir commission. Ifo shall not a,llow t11c3rn to be rechose:n the folloviir~.g ye,::r. Ho shall send annually rt report, Digned by them, of all the Jforosaid to our council, and another to the vir.eroy of Nuevu Espat';a. (Felj_pe II -- Madrid, Januar:v 11, 1593). LAW XV From Nuew.1 Esy.lafia to Filipin.1~3 only tv:o VGSsels can .:::ail aEnm:i.lJ.y, up to three hundrerl. tonela- das' burden. In them shall :::ie c,~:rri.c,cl tho re3nforcen;ents of men c1ncl SU!:)I,lies, anr:l. they shall b2ctr a permit. .F'or thi·J pur:,o~~'J there shall be three s}1ips, one of which sh,:111 l'E:main 'in readineus 3t tLe port of Acapulco, while the other two make tha voyaJe. For t}w securit~r of the voyage, thoso who go on account of our royal t :c'e2,3ury s hull ondeavor to n oe th~t the cost be drawn from the frei~hts. From N~ova Espana not more t ban t1<1O hundrGd and ,,fifty t hou:Jend z8:3(}[] de tj.pusquc: s.~L,J.1 be takc:;ll in the VGSSel~ durlDf; ,rny one y2ar.·. Jhccttsvcr above t~1nt amount ~L.s takcm sh1.ll. bo confL:;c,::Jtcid ,:::,nd applied L1 thrJe equal r~artr: to the ox:cl-,e q1J0r, the juclge, .:.:md +~ he dennuncer. We order t:.he ,<:;o\rcr·ilOl:' of Fili;)ir.as to inspr:3ct the shint: w:1en the/ 1·0:·:i(;ll port, ::Lld ex,~cute the penalty. (F'eiire II -- i.l.l·}cir:L:...~, J,11111.L,ry 11, 1593. :i?clipe III - V3lladolid, December 31, l604)r LAvv The npportionmcnt YJ.,IV o-:: the perm:itted amount of two hundred and fifty thous3nd pesos, concedod to the inhabit&nts of the F'iJ.irinrrn Is1an(is, nust be mado among th,,3rn, and the tJhole aViou:1t must be rr:;gis-L,crccl. Endeavor shull be ~ade to lmve lees than one third part -249return in gold; and the governor shall prevent ~nd take precautions against any fraud or decej.-;;, ond shall take what meusures he deems expedient. This olso we charg~ upon t~e vicsrof of ~u~va.Esp~~n in whatev~r pertains to hun, (1; 01:Lpe II -- Mndrid, J£tnuary 11, 1 1 ::;93. ) LAW LXXI Wf'J ordnr and conun.:md, ~-:.hat under no con:::d.der:..1ti0n in any manner can a~y ship ~o from the province of Peru, Tierra-Firme, Guntomala, Nuevu Espafia, or any other p,cirt of our VJ'cstern Indias, to China to t:cade or traffic, or for any other purpose; nor can any ship go to the Filipinas Islands, except from Nueva Espafla, in accordance with the laws of this titulo: under penalty of the confiscation of the ship; and its value, money, merchandise, and oth 1Jr thin,?S of itf3.CD.rgo 3hall be sent to these kinvdoms in accord2nce with letw 67 of this 'titnlo, nnd-thus it shall be oxecuted. We prohibit and forbid c..ny merchand:Lse ocin:s takon from Nueva Espafia to the provinces of Peru and Tierrc-Firme, that shall have boen taken there from Filj.pinus, even if the duties should bo paid nccardin7 to tne rules and ordinances; for it is our pur~ose anct will thQt no t,;~oods shi·pned from China qnd the Fili~inaJ Islands .. • th.e .sei· d provinces ' b e con3ume d u1 oj: P cru nnei-~ '''' 1:i.erraFirme. Whatever shc1.ll be fom:d in the posse:.Jr;ion of any pernon, we orde~ to ~e c?~fiscated~~ap~lie~ 1 ~nd regulatod, a:3 contained 1.n t.ri::.s la-iJ-. \l1 0J.1.pe l.I -M.1drid, January 11, 1593, and tluly 5, 159:;. Felipe .l \ J'.' III -- Valladolid, Dccer.:1ocr' 31, 160h,.) XXVIII LA\'J The vicoroys, presidents, and auditors, and all other officors of justice shall make efforts to find all tho.se 1.1bo sl1all have berm sent "co Filipinas to re;-:dd e durin;-:: the t :i.me of their obl ig:at, ion, who have remained L1 Nu0vn Esprtfia and other parts o.f the-ir ·1·u,..,i,,o'in·:·icn ;:iric"1 ,_.h·:,Jl fore'" the:~m 1:rith all rigor to g,) to rer.ddo 5..n those :L:,lands, procccdinr, again~t thuir p0rsons and properties nnd executing the pcn:::tlties t.h[:it they sh.sll hnve incurr0d. Tlw •. ,. L ,..., ~- ,_, \.J ' - J ' ( ' • ! \.J .,(_.1, - -·· I..> I . • ..... • • • -250- fisc&ls of our Audioncia in Manila shall plead ~hat is ndvisAble in re~~rd to the aforosaid. (Felipe II -- Madrid, February 20, 1596.) LAW LIV We order that the governors of Filipinas shall not allow slaves to bo sent to Nueva Espafia as u business transaction or for any other reason - except th:3.t, when tho govm'nor e:o cs t,hcir2, rlis successor m3.y give him permission to t~ke as many as six slaves wi~h him; to each of the auditors who shall make .the voyage, four; a~d to other respected persons, merchants with capital, and officials of our royal treasury who co and do not return,two. We order the viceroy, alc'llde-muyor and officials of Acap ilco, to se,2 to the fulfilJ.rncnt and execution of this la:w, and to confiscate the 1:,lEives in excess of this number. 1 (Felipe II -- Hadrtd, April 10, 1597). LAW XL We orde1~ that tbere be uut one cornmEtndcr ond one lieutenant ( who s11Gll b c c1 dmiral) for t frJ tv10 ships from Filipinas to i'JU(;V.':l. Espai'ia; th(lt eacli ship shall take no more than one milit3ry captain, besi,Jes thcJ ship mast.er and as 1,1any as fifty effective and useful. soldiers in each ship with p3y, and the suilor~ necessary to make the voy2ge properly each way - who shall be efficient and examined - and one pilot and assistant to each ship; for both ships one- pursor (x.:1~1dr2_E_) and accountant. All appointments to t~e said posts shall be made by the governor Bnd captain-feneral alone, without the ir.tervention of the ur·chbi,shop, or "ny o~·"'c"r -rs"'" no+·,1i't'--,t,·nr-1·1'nrr cl"'>l O ,;..+' u. l.11 LG I.i.v u .... (!.~ 'n· l1·c.:{ ~-i J,o::t--~L have ., 1rJ l:~ · ' d to tne ' ,·,r d l ' · b een provJ.ae contr2ry. vv::; or _c::c t·1a.-c' cr::oice be me.de from amon:i; the most respected ::1nd influential inl1abitants of those islands, .:uHl of tho::,CJ riiost suitable for the scd.d offices a.nd the duties U,at, the appointees must exercise. If they shall not be such the matt or shall b'3 made an articl~ Jn t;1n governo1~ 1 s resicencio. (Feli)'.:10 III -- Barcelonn, ,Ju,ne 15, 1599; Va:.ladolid, December 31, 1604; San Lorenzo, April 22, 8 · M·lUU.l ]_ d ' !·,JHY i''·- ?'2 ·-)o • ) , l ?O. ,) - ' ,.,_)' 1" C),c, 'JJ..1., ,.J •..,-· . \J \'1 .._.i . • 0 ' 1 1 ·'· 1..J 7 -251- LAW XXXIX Since there are skilled and examined pilots for the Filipinos line, those who are not such shall not be admitted in our ships nnd other craft. (Felipe III -- Valencia, December 31, 1603,) LAW LXXVI We char~o 2nd order the viceroys of Peru to see that nll th0 ordlnonces in regard to the prohibition of Chino:..,c stuffs be ful.fillod and uxccuted exactly. For their execution ::ir:.d fu1fil1m0nt, they uLalJ. appoint an auditor of our royal Audiencia of Los Rcye3, in 'dliom they can place ent,ire c::onfidoncc. 'They shall see that ho proc8eds thorot::.ghly and executes the penal r,ies with tlw required ri~or, without any dispensation, The auditor shall privately try these cases in the said city and its districts in so far as he shall h.:rv8 caus0 to invoku the 1.av-i; nnd all other justices in their territories shall do tho same. (Felipe III -- Valladolid, Dec2nibcr 31, 1601:). LAW =~xrx Inasmuch cm the majority of' t;1ose go._;_l:E: annualJ.y fr0m Nueva Espafia ~o Filipi.nas do not stop there, but retu:cr. immodiatcly, nfter inv,2s l;::.ng ~heir rnone;; theri::.·fore, we ore.er the vie er:Jy of dv.evo. Es- pan.1. to pornd.t no oivi to go to :F'j_li.:oL,,,s.s, rnJ.e3.s he give bonds that he will bocome a c it l7, en .J.ncl 1 :i VtJ thei-·e for more th&n oicht yours, or unless he b,·j sent E18 o s0ld:ie:r to the ,tovern·.)r, 011 th0;J0 who vjolote this, and their bond;3tnEm, sh,'.::\11 tic e:v.:ccuted the p~nalti~s __ ~hat ·~l;ey_ :Lncur, v·J~thout pardon. (Felipe III -~ VaL.'.adol:1.u, DecNnoe::c jl, J..60!d. LAW LXIX In. the vousols that we shall permit to s~il from Peru to Nuav2 Espofia and tho port of Acapulco or f:rom Nueva Esn;c1fia to Peru and its 1>orts, no quantity of Chinese ~5tuff,s can bE: l1drm, cold, bought, -252- or exchanged, even though it may be reported to be gratuitously as a gift or charity, or for the service of divine worship, or in any other qunl:ity or forrr, in order that the prohibition may not be evaded by such pretexts and frnuds, In case that any shall be convicted of the above as chief factors, associates, or particulars, or of aiding or giving advice, they shall, besides the confiscation of thtJir goods and boat, incur on their persons the civil and criminal penalties imposed on those who handle contraband goods, and of perpetual banishment, and dGprivation of the post that they shall havo obtained from uo in the Indias. In regard to the above we charge the conscience and cure of our servants. (Felj_pe III -Valladolid, December 31, 1604 (?); San Lorenzo, April 22, 160S (?); clauses 16 and 17.) LAW LXX If any quantity whatever of Chinese stuffs be found in any boat sailing from Nueva Espafia to Peru or in the opposite direction, the inspector, royal officials, and the other persons who take part in the register and inspection shall be considered as perpetrators and offenders in the crime; so that, taking example from t hum, others ID[.t y abstain from similar transgressions. Tho c2ptains, ma,stors, bor.i.tswains, and other officers whose duties extend to tl1e management of vessels, shall also be considered as otfenders and accomplices. (Felipe I I I -· Valladolid, DeGember 31, 1604 (?); San Lorenzo, April 22, 160S (?); clause 18.) LAW LXXVIII Permission was given for two ships to go to Nueva Espana annually from Peru for commerc(;; and trade to the value of two hundred thousand ducados; which was afterward reduced to one ship, with certain conditions. And inosmuch as the trade in Chinese stuffs has increased to excescive proportions in Peru, notwithstc1ndirn~ so nany ;):cohibitions expedient to our royal s erv:ic t~, -;_:, he ,v elf o.re und ut ::Ll i ty of the public cause, and the co1 nderce o.f thesJ o.nd those kingdoms; -253- and a fin~l decision of the viceroy, Conde de Chinchon, having precoded, and a vote of the treasury to suppress absolutely any opportunity for tl1i~ trade; therefore we order and command th8 viceroys of Peru and Nueva Espafia to prohibit and suppresa, without fail, this comm2rce and trade b etwean both ~dne;d0ms, by aJ.l the ways and_r!1eans possible, and that it be not carried on by any other regions, for we by this pressent prohibit it, This prohibition shall be kept strictly and ,shall. contin 1e to orJ srJ kept. (Felipe III -- Valladol:i.d, DocGinber 31, 160,+; Scm Loren:30, Juna 20, 1609; I;C1dri.J, Ivi:ar8h 2J, 1620, cla:1se 1. Felipe IV -·- Mn.drid, Novemher 25, 1634; Mt:1adrid, March 29, 1636, a cl~use of a letter to the Conde de Ctinchon, ) 1 LAW XLII We order and comtir.:md that the g onerD.ls, capp-·::, tQ ·f'-;-'" -',:,"q .'::' S-.h·'ps t aJ.n;:;, aG\jn ..,, ~-d ll O., __ ._J_Cl .. .1.,_ O".f' tl-· ,ue ::i'-il1,'-·'• p:in.00 l. give bonds, to vJhc.t .sum the governor Bnd enptaingeneral sh&ll deem best, for the greater security of what shall bo in their chargo. They shall give their residenoia of e&ch vova~e before the auditors of our royal A.udiencia of I,il9_nIJ.u and shall :cender satisfaction in .the aforesaid. {Felipe III -- Valladolid, DecombGr Jl, 1604.; Ms:drid., ~,fay 23, 1620. Carlo.s II ( in this Re..9opj)JlcicS11) - 1681 ~ the• date of first E' di t ion of B&Q..912.:.1:kQ..C iq,r;_d ·2 1 §..Y.Q§_ • J r' -, c•• .1:~ LAW LXXIV We order the viceroys of Nuev~ Esp~ria to maintain very special care of the observance nnd eKecution of the ordinances for the commerce of the Filipinas li.ne, est.::i.blished. by the laws of thi.s t itulo; and to keep at the port of Acapulco, in addjtion to the royal officiRls who shnll be thero, a p0rson of great honesty 3nd trustworthiness, with tte title of alealde-mayor, so that overy'ching he done with very e;reat cautj_on, nnct justice be observed~ Ho shaJ.l not per.mit mo:ro silver t0 be -taken to F'j.J.ipina.s than v:hat concP.ded. by these 1.1vrn, ,l\}ith or without license. lFelipo III - VaJ.1ado2.J.c, December JJ., 1604,) -254LAW LX The registers of all shipments from Filipinas shall be opened in the port of Acapulco, by the person to whom the viceroy of Nueva Espana entrusts it, and the officials of our royal treasury of the said port. They together shall examine and investigate the bales and boxes, and shall make as close and . careful an examination as shall be nee Gssary to discover what may have come outside of the register and permission. They shall send the registers to riojico, as has been the custom, with all investigations made at the port of Acapulco, by a sufficiently trustworthy person, or by one of our said officials. In Mejico everything shall be again investigated, and the duties appertaining to us shall be appraised and collected; and all other investigations requisite to ascertain and discover what has come unregistered shall be made. All that shall have been sent without register and in violation of the prohibition shall be confiscated. No permission shall be given by this means, pretext, and occasion, to cause any unreasonable injury to the owners of the goods. (Felipe III -- Valladolid, December 31, 1604; San Lorenzo, April 22, 1608; clause 11.) LAW IX We declare that in the five hundred thousand pesos granted by permission (to be sent) from Nueva Espana to Filipinas, must and shall be entered the amounts of legacies, bequests, and charities (obr§.£ ;£~€,), with tho wrought silver and all other things carried thither; and nothing shall be reserved~ except the pay of the sailors 1 as is ordered by the fol· lowing law. (Felipe III - 0an Lorenzo, Aucust 18, 1606. J LAW X We grant permission to the sailors serving on the trading shiµs between Nueva Espana and Filipj_nas to carry in money the actual and exact sum of their pay, in addition to the general permission, Thus -255shall the viceroys of Nueva Espafla provide, unless they perceive some considerable objection. They shall see to it that the said sailors or other persons shall not be allowed to exceed the amount permitted by this law. (Feli-oe \ . III -- San Lorenzo, Aw?.ust:. ~19, 1606.; LAW XVIII The cargo of the ships of the line, on both outward and return trips between Nueva ~spufia end Filipinas, shall be stovrnd in the f'orehold;, clnd only the sea stores, the sailors' and mess chests, the rigging, sails, and all the necessities, between decks. Likewise rigging shall be takon to the port of Acapulco, in consj_Jeration of the fact that the city of YJanila has it at cheaper rates than the port of Acapulco whither it is carried from San Juan de Ulua at very great cost and expense. We order this to be so executed, nrovid::nc: there is no inconvenience; and if there shuuld be-any, we shall be advised in o~der to provide the advisable measures. (Felipe III -- San Lorenzo, April 22, 1608.} 2. Memorial of Jw:m Grae y Monfalcon on Philippine Trade In 1635, Juan Grae JVionfalcon memorializeci the Kinr.; on the conditions and neods of the Philippines. His 11 f-fomorial" is a valuable source of information on the tr.sc~o .'.1nd commerce of the PhiJ.ippines in the eurly pc:~rt century. 1 . 1 owing: the sevsnteenth Pertinent portions of the document are the fol- ------·B, c.~ R• , 1 of - v o1 • IXV , pp • 1+8 - 51 ; 52 ~· 59 • -256Don Juan Grao y Monfalcon, procurator-general for the distinguished and loynl city of Manila, the metropolis and capital of the Filipinas Islands, declares that the preservation and protection of these islands are of the utmost consideration and importance, and cl.ese:cve the most careful attentiori, on account of the great adv~ntages and profits which they afford - to say noth:Lng of the princ5.pal consideration, namely, the service of God, and the propagation of religion and the Catholic fa~th. In the aforesaid city and in the other islnnds that faith is estahlishecl, anJ will steudily become stronger, ir1crensinc; and sprendin7: not only among those but other and neighboring islands. This is especially true in GreDt Ch:i_na and Japor:., which from continual intETcourse and friendly relations with the said Filipinas Islands may - if the Christian faith is preserved and permanently maintained in the latter, and as deeply rooted and as pure anf constant as at present look, in the :3aid matter of r1:d.igion, for_felicitous and great results. The same fjnay be sai,g/ for v:hat concerns the service of your l'vlajesty, and the profitable and advr1ntageous increase of the roy,;1.l estate, since even the profits which :rour Majesty at present enjoys and possesses in the said city and the other islands are many, 2nd of great importance. For in one village alone, which t hoy_call Par_ian, an arguebusshot from the said city Zof Manil_g/, n~orc than twenty thousand Chinese Indians called Sangleys,- and :i.n the other islands over ten thousand more, hnvo all come from Great China and Japon for their own private affairs and interests. It is they who build up and maintain the 2reater ourt of the traffic and commerce of the island.s. From that result the trade with J\Tueva Espana, and the ships which sail thither annually, laden with many .Q.ifferent kinds of merchiJ.ndise (carried Lto lVanil.Q/ and bartered by said Sangleys) - · such as much gold (wrou~ht, anc' in sheets); diamonds, rubios, and othe,;} gerrrn, beside[3 <":t gro.1.t quantity of pearls; many silk textiles of all colors - taffetas, d2masks, satins, silk.grograrns, and velvets - and raw silk; a quantity of whit;e and black cotton cloth; amber, civet, musk, nnc1_ storo.x. rrhence arises annually great gain to the royo.1 treo.sury, on account o~ the many considerable duties which are paid and collected both whon the ships leave the said city of lVf..anila, -257- and their islands and ports, and in that of Acapulco; and later, when they enter Nueva Espafia and the City of Mexico. There, when the ships leave for the said Filipinas, the duties ore doubled, as well as in the sc.J.id port of Acapulco, by those duties anew i.ncurrP-d and paid, the .[trade of the7 said Sar!gJ_eys being e great part in this receipt Tactguisiciog/. Of no less considGro.tion is the tribute which t:he .Sane:1 eys pay to the I'Oyal tre!.:lSl.l.ry for thoir l ic CD$ 8, and ri,;1,ht of entrance and residence in the said vilJ.age of~the Parian, and in the other isl~nds where the~ reside. Since the s1id Srn12:levs '-' J number tJlirtv /thous7 anj , they pay in most y8ars an &nnual sum of t1,10 hundred and seventy thousand r(aals of ui3i1t · ( w;.·1:ich means nine reals of eight for each license), which.are placed in the royo.1 treasury. In the islands of Pintados and other islands which belong to thu said Filipinas, there are one hundred and fourteen thoucund two hundrod and seventeen Indians, a:J..l payi_ng ·cribute to the royal treasury. Their consarvation is very necassary, as they are no longer wild and 2re excel]_ ent wo r:rmon, c1 nd for that re,·rnon are people of uti1 it y and profit for any occasion that may arise - especially ,"J.s thtjrc: are o.13o many gold mines in '.:~he said islands, whence ia obtained a quantity of gold. There are also other fruits of the lnnd in great abundance, es9ccially wax, cotton, large cattle, swine, fowls, rice, and civet, besides other innumerable products and means of gain. All of this tells and publishes the great importance of the said city and its islands, and of their prese'rvE:tion; and the many :i.ncomparabl e wrongs t1hich wou1 d follow if the :3uid city, the capitnl the others' were to br:)come dcpo:?u.lated, ruinod, or destroyed. It is vory noar to that, because of the great c:,nd continual misf0 r~ur.es unci disasters which U\e inhabit,:1nts of it 1wve ::mffered and are suffering, caused hy fires that hnve dcstror~d.almost the entire city and the property of th0 said inhabitants, Clnd tho shipwreck ~nd loss of muny different vessels, which have bean miserably vJrocl:ed during the usual voya~e from the said city to Nu.evu Espaaa; with the destruction of the goods and wealth of the said inhabitants which 3.rc carried in tho ships. The effects fro@ so many and so large loises last and will l~st alw~ys; for those losses hav~ ruined and impov Grishod t ho inhab 1.tants t0 a cler;rc?-c very dif.1 of - -25$- ferent from what one can imagino 2nd e:r:plain. Consequently, if the generosity, magnificence, and powerfuJ. hand of your Majesty d.o not protect it, one + . .. can ana mus t .f ear '"'' cn.e very cer.,aJ.n ruu1 anu c,esvruction of tho said cj_ty and of the other islnnds, which are under its e;overnrnr:'nt and pr0tcction •••• 1 1 , ...1.... Although the said city and its inho.bitants have ., ' ·7 , ( ,:1.s is . b een an d. are a.L',,-Jays V(Jry . care f uJ.~ -an d ·1igi_anc very well l:nown), de.fer:ding, at the cost o:f their liv8s and r.wods, the J.and f:com t;he incessant bornbc:rd~ ments, sur~rises, and attacks of the said Dutch, with the forced obligation of very generally keepin~ their arms j_n readiness all the tj_mc; enduring a [:ervile lifG full of annoyance and dan~er, although they could leave it, and it would be buttor and more worth livin~ if it were less crievous, and freo from·so many dangers and difi'icult::.cs: nevertheless they endurEi them, in considc~ration of the service of your f1b,j .:.:sty, and in continuation of the many services ·which they have rendered in the defense and praservation of that co11ntry; arid hop:Ln,I ch:.\t the grec.ttness and J.i'oe:ca.lity of your MajestJ i;,-Jill l)ro"::.ect and relieve +:,horn, so that they may ;iccornplish their purpose bGtter. Particularly do they ar;;k that you ordor to be repealou th,:l col~_ection of the tvJo por c cnt, the irnpo sit ion of which was ordered by a decree of tha former year six hundred and four· on the merchandise (3:X:portG<~ from tho said islands to the said Nueva Espafia, in addition to the three per cent paid on them by tho merchants of the said city - which hea~d and received notice of the said royal decreo in the year of six hundred &nd seven, wjile Don Rodrigo de Vibero wns gov0rLor. At that time thG decre2 was not made eftective or fulfi1 led a"-' the difficul t·y '.;rid ,rs~oa.,_ '}l cad' ' F1t, that accompany it were recognized. Cor1sr3quent~:,, i·e, remained. in that condition until the ye:::.r ;3 L: hqndr8d and eleven, when the coll<::ction of tLe 3,:i~.0_duty was ae:,J.in charted to Governor Don Juan de Sirvn [L. 8., Sil V§.7. He, tryin~ to carry out its provisions, r2cogni~ed tho same difficulties, for the many reasons adv&nced by the city, which were so just and relevunt that they obliged ~im to call a treasury council, Having there discussed and conferred upon those reasons, and it having beon se2n that they were so urgent and necessary that they stric:tly proventcd. and ou~ht to prevent 1 ..L_ , , ~ . I, .• ~ - ··:.) J.. V l.J ' - lo...· 7l ,/ ....... ~ :.:,;J'QC' I\..) '--·,._: -259the execution of the said royal d~cree of 604, he suspended_it for the time 'oeing, giving your lvlajesty notice /thereof?. The decree remained in this condition until the year six hundred and twenty-five, in which the royal officials again discussed the matter o:' the collection of the said two per cent, during the government of Don Fernando de Silva. He, recognizing the same obstacles, and that those obstacles were much groater then bocaus() of the vrnrse c:ondition and the notabJ..e change and damege to v-11hich the af·f airs of the said city had come - the p :ropert:r, t:caffic, and means of gain of its inhabitants - wl--.:.ich a g1°eat reduction and difference from that whicll they had in the said year of six hundred and seven, concurred with what had been provided by his predecessor, the satd Don Juan de Silva, !lrid ordered tLat no innovation be mado in it. The same w::1s done by the governor who succeeded him, Don Juan Niflo de Tabora. Tl1us, t, he said governor.s, as each c0nfront ed the matter, always came to see very p~ainly the said difficulties, which at present are not only of the abovementioned character, but ore impossible to ovsrcomi-:l bcc&us 2 of the oondit ion of uffairs, the pove1~ty of the inhabit~nts, and the great decrease and diminu-sion al tr.e trede arid cornn1erce of former tim0s. Tlwt . given . . b y t1e l t 01,, cne visiis more promi~enca e.f :ors tor, Licentinte Don Francisco de Rojas, v1Lo ;nnde strenuous efforts to have the collection of the two per cent carried out. ~evertheless, he oaw with his own eyes the said disadvantages thnt re,suJ.ted from the said collection. One of them was the rosolutitn of the inL1abitants not to exDort their rrDods and merchandise; nor could they do so,· b 8CDW3 e or'-'!:.he great lo,sses, both past and present, which they h&ve encoun~ered. This is the sreatest damage that can ha~pen to the royal treasury; for if the export .::md c0111cerco ce3.ses, not only will th('j S[.dd tvv0 pel' cent be lc1ckL1r:, but also the old three per c0ri.t whicb I1as always boen paid, as well as the other three ~)er cent v:hich was lately imposed upo.i the mercl1cmdise which the Chinose Indians brinz to the s3id city and the Filipinas Islands. 1-1.cco:-diw:::lv, i.f the cornrr:orc.:e of the islands with Nueva Espafi~ tails, it i~ certain and infallible that that of :che saj.cl Chinese, v'?hich forms the whole export to Nueva E-SpafiG, will also fail, .t' J , • • -260- Therefore, the said visitor, notwithstanding the great desire which he showed of p ..1.ttinc; the said collection into execution, did not dare to do it; but considerc:d it botter to suspend it, and report to your Majesty. Althoug:1 he t.r:1.ed to have it collected as a 7olun~ary sorvice for the future, the citizens, soeing the:Lr grcrxt lack of wenlth, could not conform to that moosurc, althou~h for that time only they gave a subsidy of four tnousand pusos~ on condition that it si1ould not sorve as a precedent f9r the future, and that ther,o E\ho,1ld bG no fuj_~thor !~c:;1k of the said collection Lol the said twc por cen:t/ until, after your I~jesty had examined it, n suitable decision ohould be adopted •••• 1 -261- PART THREE THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY CHAPTER ONS INTRODUCTORY SURVEY. SPAIN IN 'i'HE EIGHTSZNTH CENTURY In Spain a new dynastic era began at the opaning of the eighteenth century. The Hapsburg dyn:1.sty carae to an end uith the death of Charles II in October, 1700. A new dynas- ty, the Bourbon, tool: over the reins of power. The first 1·uler of the new dynasty uas Philip of Anjou, grandson of Louis XIV of France. He ascended the throne of Spain as P,,.1)_·1·lp V •1 -------1 Philip was ~ related by blood to the Sp2nish Haps- burgs. His grandmother, Maria Terusa, .,v:Lfe of Loui[, XIV, was the daug!1ter of Philip Ii! of 3pain, an6- an elder· sister of Charles LI. Shortly after the death of Chr1rles II, Louis ::rv, in a gathering of notables in his palace at Versailles, formally presont ed his grandson as King of Spain. Jose O. Rubio, ~n his ~-I:~tQL.:1,£....dG E§i:3./ia, Ch. 1, vol. 5, r·elates_tha~ on "l,hat occasion, Louis XIV c1ddrossed the gathering in trrnso words: "Gentle1~1cn: Here vou have the kin::r. of Spain. ThG accidents of birth have ;alled him to this thr;ne; Spain wishes him to 1)e her JdjE: and hc:.s asked me for it with earnestness. I acced0 to It with plensure, com9lying thereby with the will of Divj_ne Providence. n -262- The eighteenth cm1tury was covered in its entirety by the reigns of the first four Bourbon kings: Philip V, who ruled from 1700 to 17/+6; Ferdinand VI, 1746-1759; Charles III, 1759-1788, and Charles IV, 1788-1808. lent period ror Spain, It was a turbu- Throughout the greater part of that peri-0d wars raged in Europe in 'Which Spain became inV'.)lved with disastrous ~nd ruinous r~sults to herself. Shortly after the accession of Philip V, tho first of these European conflicts began, the War of the Spanish Suecession (1701-1713), As the name denotes, the irnraediatc cause of the war was the question of succession to the Spanish throne, This auestion rose to the pro~ortions of a major international problem for involved :j.n it was the issue of the balance of power in Europe. Two of the claimants Then turning to Philip, Louis, according to the same author, continued; t 1Be a good Spaniard: this is from this moment your primary duty. You should bear in mind, however, that you are born a Frenchman. It is your mission to preserve the union of Spain and France, as a rnenns of making them happy and o.f assuring the peace of Europe." Rubio goes on to say ·eihat the Spanish ambassador appro 3ched Ph1lip, kissed his hand, and, overwhelmed with emotion, exclaimed: "What a happy moment l Now there are no more Pyrcneesl They have been levelled to the ground and we now .form but one nation, n -263- to the Spanish throne 1.vere Louis XIV of Frcmce nnd Emperor Leopold I of Austria. 2 Whoever ~10uld win the rj_ght of sue - cession would gre2.tly enhnnce his power, position and pres- tige in Europe and thereby would upset the Euro~ean balance of power. Hrin5ing to bear al:l_ the force ond l1sight of his influence, Louis XIV succeeded in securing the selection of his grandson, Louis Philip, as heir to the Spa_nich thror..e. The bringing of Spain with her vast interests and possessions in Europe and thE.:: Indias under the control of France was viewed by England as a serious threat; to the peace of Europe and to her own securj_t y. The French action, there- fore, combined 111/tth other acts of Louis XIV, whicL E11glanJ. considered hostile and unfriendly towards herself, brought on the War of the §panish Succession. The war wus ended by the Treat~, of Utrecht (1713). Under the terms of the Treaty, Spain ceded Gibraltar and the island of Minorc~ to England. Besides, she was forced 2 - Louis XIV's claim was based on strong erounds of close blood relationship. His mother, Anna, wac an elder dau;:i_;ht er of Philip III of Spain. Besides, his 11,i:Lf e, Ma.ri-':l Teresa, -was a Spanish Hapsburg, an elder dnught '31' of Philip IV. Leopold I had caually valid rear..:ons in support of his claim. Llke Louis XIV, he was a grandson of Philip III of Spain. His mother, Maria Anna, was a youncrJr daught or of Philip III. Also, like :Souis XIV, ho was a son-in-law of Philip IV. His first. wife, Margaret Theresa, was a younger daughter of Philip IV. -264to gro.nt certain commercial concessions to the British in Spanish America. Knovm as the £i§_ie£!:to, _the privileges ac- quired by the British under the Treaty of Utrecht were: (1) the exelusi ve right to supply Afr;i.can slaves to Spain's colonies in the New World, and ( 2) the ri!~ht to send one trading ship a year of 500 tons to Spanish America. These results of the War affected adversely Spain's vital interests, The loss of Gibraltar was a serious blow to her power and prestige in Europe for it deprived her of a portion of her own territory, whose location at the entrance to the Mediterranean Sea had great strategic importance. And, the granting of the ,a;S iento meant that her long established monopoly of the trade of her American colonies was broken and that her commerciwl supremacy in Spanish America was threatened and endangered. The situation arising in Spain as a result of the War of Spanish Succession may explain the suddon ehango in the trend of Spain's policy towards the- Manila Acapulco tr,::i.de in the years immediately follcn'Jing the conclusion of the war, This development was brou 0 ht about by royal decrees promulgated in 1718 and 1720. Under these decrees, limitations were placed upon the trade betweeri the Philippines and Nueva Espafia which would,in fact, virtually put that trade out -265of existence~ Considering the fact that, only a few years before (1702), the Spanish Government in a spirit of libera- lity, allowed an increase in the volume and value of the trade of the. Phil ip9ines with Nueva Espana, thl'; reasofl for the enactment of the legislation of 1718 dnd 1720 wns auite dif.ficul t to understnnd. It would seem, howev0.r, that tJ1e :restrictions were intended to off se·~ the lo..ss es i..•1hich the merchants in Spain expected they WDuld incur ao a result of the concessions Spair. was forced to make under the 'l'rec1ty of Utrecht. In its anx:i0ty to protect and safeguard the interests of these merchants, the Spanish Go-i10:cnment was com,trained to c;:ct in the way it did, though in doing so, it would sacrifice tli~ interest/.?. of those j_n the Philippines who engaged in the H.'.Jnila ...Acapi..llco trnde. For nea.r~.y thtrty years after the s:i.gninsi: of the tre-aty of Utrecht, thare was peaco for Spain. The J)()riod> however, was m~rkod by a series of .:ontroversies and micrundG:r-sta,ndings with Engl:::md growing out of alleged abuses by British traders of privileges granted to them by the Treaty of Utrecht. Spanish war vessels patrQllcd the hi:h seas in an effort to enforce strictly the provisions of the treaty, stoppj_ng and i:;earching British vessels suspectcct of engo.ging in contr.:.iband tr~da, Continued dispute.s over freedom o:f -266navigation on the high seas as well as over British rights in Spanish America ~nder the Treaty of Utrecht finally brought on wa~ between Spain and England in 1739. The conflict soon involved other European nations and finally developed into a full see.le European war. The War of the Austrian Succession.(1744-48), as this war came to be known, was terminated by the Treaty of Aixla-Chapelle. The war was indecisive in its results. The 'l'reaty of Aix-1.a-Chapelle proved to be merely a temporary Matters were respite for the leading European contenders. arranged on the basis of the principle, statu$ guo aQ!.§_ bellum. As for Spain, the war brought neither honor nor glory. On the contrary, the net results proved qnit e dis- advantageous to her for she was forced to 1l~e to a1t ex- ~tt.'· tension of the asiento privileges for the years "chat were interrupted by the war. Ferdinand VI ascended the throne of Spain in the midst of the War of the Austrian Succession. He followed the course laid out for Spain by his predeceBsor) but, as soon as the war was over, he decided to adopt a new course in matters of foreign policy. Peaceful by temperament and inclinations, Ferdinand wanted Spain to keep away from the quarrels and rivalries of European nations. He believed -267- that the needs and interests of Spa.in at t:.1a.t 'cirne demanded strict adherenco to such a policy. When, therefore, the Seven Years War broke oub in Europe in 1756, the S~anish government in line with this policy, declared itself neutral. This war was the decisive conflict in the long standing rivalry between England and Franco for colonj_al and mar::..t:.im9 supremacy. Ferdinand, up to the time of his death :t.n 1'7'59, adhered faithfully to his policy of neutrality. Ferdinand 1 s successor, however, Charles III, hts halfbrothcr, did not choose to remain neutral in the confJ.ict. In 1761, he concluded a tifc,mily compact"- i·dth the Bourbon Kini:; of France ·which virtually riw.de Spain a b8l:1..izernnt in the war then in progress. At the time Charles III decided to enter the wRr, it was no longer uncert~in hmiv that war 1;,:ould i'in,,lly c3nd. Europe, France wa.s decidedly on the lo sin,': sidG. :tn In America, trie fo.te of the French colonial ornpire had been sealed by VJolfe' s v~ictory over lviontcalrn on t.ho pJ.ains of Q.uobec (17 59). ~~11le J\JJ .._._ , Ir1di~ ,~u, B-~,tJ"c\1 .L •• ., .u ... .i"n .'. ..L .. rllCCG"SOS u ~" over the:Ll' ·Fr0nch rivt:ils nt Plnssey (175?), at Easu1ipatan and Wandiwash (1758), dn~ at Pondicherry (1761} had established definitely En~land's supremacy there. fore, entered the war ~t 2 lliJSt Charles III, there- inopportu~e moment, thereby -268- placing at serious risk Spain's vital interests. His de- cision was, to say the least, quite reckle3s and ill-advised, He placed his bets on a losing horse, As a result of Spain's joining the w:J.r, military opera- tions were extended to the J'hil.ippine3. A Bri~ish expedi- tionary force from India took lV'.o.nilri in October 1762 and occupied the city and its environs for the duration of the At the Paris peace conference, England chose to re- war. store :Manila to Spain. British.statesmen, for reasons of their own, decided to return Manila, toget110r with Havana, Cuba, to Spain and to get, in lieu of these, Spanish Florida, In the period of the American H0volution new diplomatic problems arose for Spain. (1775-1783), At this time, however, the ministers o.f CharJ_es III acted with greater caution and prudence in dealin3 with problems of foreign policy. The revolt of England's AmGrican colonies wns viewed as offering a eplendid opportunity for Spain to recover the possessions she previously lost to En,;;J.and, particularly Gibraltar, Florida, and Jamaica. On the other hand, due consideration was given to the possible adverse effects upon Spain's interests in Arnorica of a successful outcome of the American Revolution. In dealing, there- fore, with the diplomatic questj_ons growing out of the -269Americ:i.n Revolution, the sclvisers of Charles III, ta:Vinc; into account the.so con:.:ddoI"utions, were not inclir.ed to act This was so particularly in connection with the ha:itily. question of Spanish rcc'J_r:~nition of American independence. In 1777 Grimaldi, Spanish foreign ministur, turned down a proposal for an alliance with the United States on tho b~sis of Spanish recognition of American independence, successor, Floridablanca Grimaldi 1 s (1777-1792), endeavor8d to get back frorn Englund Gibraltar as well as Florida and Jar.:a:Lca through diplomatic pressure, He threatened to -1.nter7ere in the I conflict which had arisen between Fnmc e !J_nd BnvJa.nd ns a result of France's. concluding the United Stutes (1778). 6f a treaty of alJ.iance with In so doing, Floridablanca ex- pected thot Enrdand would try to buy off ~Jpnnish intervention by cedin~3 Gibraltar or by giving some other valuable concnssion. By such a .n1ove, :Jpain might, attu.:i.n her ob- jectives wtthout goJ.ng to war. England, however, ignored Spain's threats, ~hereupon the latter, b3cked by a new French alliance, declared wa~ on England (1779), In join- ing France in the war a:;.::tinst England, however, Sp3.in m-':lde no commitments ree;arcU.n 0 recognition of American indoren- dence, She was interested mainly in the recovery of Ja- maica and Gibraltar, She foiled, however, to g0t these -270- back from England, although she recovered under the peace (1783), Florida, treaty The reign of Charles III was marked by the ascendancy in Spain of new ideas and tendencies in ·Spanish commorcial policy. Shortly after the termination of the Seven Years War, Spain iriaugurated a ~lan whereby direct trade could be established between Spain and the Philippines by way of the Cape of Good Hope. Annual trips wero to be made by vessels of the royal navy as a means of fostering trade be" In 1785, the arrangement tween Spain and the Philippi~es. was discontinued only to gj_ve way to a more amb itiou~ plan, That year, the Royal Company of the .Philippines (Real Compafiia de Filipinas) \vas organized. The Company was pat- terned after the Dutch East India Company and the British East India Company, 1,ihich had contributed much to thl:J success of Holland and :England respectively in t'heir commercial and colonial ventures in the East. The Royal Company was ex- pected to accomplish for Spain what the East India Companies had done for 'their respective countries, Charles III was succeeded by his son, Charles IV {1788-180$). Ckirles IV came to the Spanish throne on the eve of the French Revolution. 'l'lte ltf:Vo 1 ut ion overth:cew the ancient regime in Franco and set. up a new political and -271- social order based on the principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity. The French Revolution gave rise to a succession of events of far reaching significance in European history. The conmlications which these events created . ~ eventually involved Spain and, incidentally, Spain's dominions in America and the Far East. -272- CHAPTER TWO THE MANILA-ACAPULCO ·raADE Montero y Vidal in his Historia Genernl de:) Filipi!la.§. (l\1adrid, 1887), r.:ives a brief survey of the commercial history of the Philippines. In the following passa$es, the au- thor tells some of the important incidents in thG hi.story of the Manila-Acapulco trade. 1 In the early years of Spanish rule tho Philippines tradod with Japan, Cambodia, Sinn, tiw Moluccas and the Mi:tlay Archipelago. A few years after, with the opening of commerce with America and Europe, the volume of tr3de considerably increased and the commercial relations of this country extended to India and the regions around the Persian Gulf. Manila became the entrepot of Oriental goods which thE."i [~alleons carried to Nueva Espafio destined for the port Natividad, and, after 1602, for tho port of Acapulco. The merchants of l'Jueva Espafia and Peru, seeing the advantages of the trade with thc~hilippines and the favor~ble reception in Spain of Asiatic manufactures, gave such ll8rked preference for Asiatic commodities that t~1E) European tr&de bozan to decline, thus giving rise to loud protests on the part of. the merchants of Cadiz and Jevilla, who had 1een accusl -Vol. 1, chapter 58, Montero y Vidal used as his. main source of informo.t.:i.on the Extro.cto historial by Antonio Alvarez de Abreu (Madrid, 1736 ):··- '1 h.eautho-i~J-the ~fil-~i?.2 vJas a men,ber of the Council of the Indies. The eclitorc of the Ph:iJj.ppine Island§. hc:,ve repro due ed the ~::tracto in synopsis form in volumes 30, 44 and 45, 1 social order based on the principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity. The French Revolution gave rise to a succession of events of far reaching significance in European history. The complications which these events created eventually involved Spain and, incidentally, Spain's dominions in America and the Far East. CHAFTER 'I.WO THE MANILA-ACAPULCO 'rRADE. Montero y Vidal in his Historia General de Filipinas (Madrid, 1887), gives a brief survey of the commercial history of the Philippines. In the following passages, the au- thor tells some of the important incidents :Ln the history of the Manila-Acapulco trade. 1 In the early years of Spanish rule the Philippines traded with Japan, Cambodia, Siam, t11e Moluccas and the f/Ialay Archipelago. A few years after, with the opening of commerce with America and Europe, the vol~me of trade considerably increased and the commercial relations of this country extended to India and the regions around the Persian Gulf. Manila became the entrepot of Oriental goods which the galleons carried to Nueva Espafio. destined forth~ port Natividad, and, after 1602, for the port of Acapulco. The merchants of l'Jueva Espafia and Peru, seeing the advantages of thP. trade with the Philippines and the favorable reception in Spain of Asiatic manufactures, gave such marked preference for Asiatic commodities that tlic::i European trade began to decline, thus giving rise to loud protests on the part of the merchants of Cadiz and JevilL1, who had bBen accus1 - Vol. 1, chapter 5 8, Montero y Vidal used as his main source of information the Extracto historial by Antonio Alvarez de Abreu (Madrid, 1736 ):- Th.eauthor of-the Ell~ was a member of the Council of the Indies. The editors of the Philippine Islands hc:,ve reproduced the Extracto in synop· sis f orrn in volumes 36, 4~- and 45. -273- torned to monopolize the commerce of America, going so far us to propose the abandonment of the colony, in order that the "silver from the realms of H. M. may not fall into the hands of idolaters." In order to stoi) these complaints, a royal order was promulgated forbidding the merchants of i\Jueva Espafia and Peru to obtain, directly or tlro~~h agents in, Manila, Chinese commodities, and aJ.lowing only natives of the Philippinas to s6nd articles of China to America, in two galJ.eons of 300 ton3 each. The decree moreover limited the ve,lu.e of tne ea.ego, which the galleons could carry to Nuevu Espuflo, ~o 250,000 pesos annually for the outfoing voyage and 500 ,000 pesos, for the return trip, rigorous penuJ.ty being prescribed for the violation of these provi~ sions. It is interestin1.:; to note the reason for these restrictions as all~ged by the cedula of January 11, 1593: (Law I, tit, 45, book 9 of the Recopilaci6n. Also Law VI of the same title and book.) "Because it is necessary to hinder the trade of the West Indies with China and to moderate thQt bf the Philiv9ines whose trade with those realns haa increased so much, iT which shows so well the spirit of that age. This cedula, which was obnoxiou:J first:. of alJ to the authorities who were. charged with its enforcement, was not rigorously obs~rved until 1605, and this led the Manila merchants tp assign on the invoices values which were much lower than the renl price. Having been informed that the galleoiw wero carrying more than what was allowed, cllld exasperated by the appanmt competition which the commerce with 1 ...vl1e Plu· 1 1pp1nes . . · · t i1eir ' • .._ pi-·esmTc' e d .agaJ.nsr, Uh, eres ,..vs, the mcrchints of-Oadiz and Sevilla secured in 1635, the appointment of D. Pedro Quiroga as specj_al commissioner, to proceed to Nueva Espana and to investigate the alleged infractions. This official f1tlfilled his mission with such severity and excessive zeal that the traffic diminished ccnsiderably, with the result that for some -274tin~ there was no cargo for the. galleons, 2 In 1637 only a single tender left, despatched on the account of the conde-duque de Olivares, who enjoJed the privilege of taking part in this trade up to the value of 150,000 duros, and, according to information, the con~issioner acted less rigorously with respect to the vessel, The discontent of the people of Manila was groat as it was just, inasmuch as they depended for their living on thnt commerce. In a respectful and well-reasoned exposition to the court, they presented their complaints, rn1d obtained, September JO, 1639, an order for t:11::3 abandonmerit of the r'f.:)p;istGring, 'Weighing and measuring of the goods embarked on the Acapulco galleon, except on a positive information that the merchandise exceeded in value tho limit fixe:.d by law; but the traffic had by that time somewhat debilitated by reason of business paralization and of dama::;es which were occasioned by the fiscal rig:or of :~he comnd.ssionor. In the year 1702, as a result of repeated petitions on thl"3 part of merchnnts in Ivianila and ::i.n f:fie:;dco, the value of merchandise destined .for Nueva Espafia was raised to J00,000 pesos and 600,000 pesos 2 - An idea of the rigorous manner in which Commission· er Quiroga fulfilled his mission may be obtained f rom'-a royal decree dated February 14, 1640, 1.vhich reads in part as follows: (From the Extracto historial, Vol. JO B. &:, R., p. 87.) - ---- ••• not content ·with detaining whatever t~ie shipi..'l carried, he weighed and opened registered bales and chest contraty to the usage at all the ports, against the regulation provided by royal decree~; and the appraisement that~ made of the merchEmdise was so increased ai1d exorbitant that what was at its just price in Mexico worth 800,000 pesos he rated at four millions. For the commodities which in Manila cost at the rate of nine pesos, the said Don Pedro appraised at twenty-two; and nruch of the cloth was sold in Acapulco, in his very sight at six pesos, while he had collected the full amount of the royal dues, on the basis of twenty-two, at which he had valued the good. -275- respectively, for the outward and return voyages, in two galleons of 500 tons each, but the laws prohibiting Spanish merchants .from visiting Chinese ports and those of Mexico from engaging in the trade with Manila vrnre continued, as well as other restrictions which rendered illusory the increase o.f 50,000 pesos, · New complaints formulated at the beginning of the 18th century by the shipowners of Sevilla and Cadiz, denouncing that the galleons were bringing to Acapulco double an~triple the cargo permitted,rand explaining tha'~ t~1e' abundance of cloths in America had caused a notable decadence in the te::~tile industry of the Peninsula, resulting in the disappearance of many active factories in Toledo, Valencia, Sevilla and Granada, caused the promulgation of the c edula of January l1, 1710. Urider the de.cree the importation of all kinds of silk from China, whether manufactured or raw, was forbidden, the Acapulco trade being limited to linens, spices and other.articles which were not carried from Spain. In spite of the fact that this ceaula found a strong opponent in the marquis of Valero, who was at the time viceroy of Mexico, and who, having suspended its execution, made it clear to the kin,~ that, without the trade with Acapulco, the island colony would perish, as its products were insignificc1nt and the cargo of the galleons consisted almost wholly of Chinese cloths which the Mexicans preferred to whose of the Peninsula, because of their cheaper prices and better quality, the government, in accordance with the recommendation of the Council, renewed, on the 29th of October, 1720, the former order, prohibiting absolutely the introduction of Chinese silks into any of the Spanish ports in both hemispheres, with the tyrannical proviso that within six months, all articles of silk found in Nueva Espafia must be consumed, and that those remaining after that period to be consie:ned to the flames., Upon hearing, in 1722, of this terrible decree, the authorities, the religious corporations, and representatives of business and of the com1nunity, in unison, transmitted to the king through the delegates, Dn. Francisco Diaz Romero and Dn. Antonio de Echeandia, well reasoned and energetic -276expositions, praying not only for the repeal of the measure, but also for the increase of the value of the exports in proportion to the growth in population of the capital.3 After a long controversy, in which the merchants of Cadiz and Sevilla presented all the objections they could thir.:c of, and supported by the "overseers of the manufacture of silks in the cities of 1 oledo, Ecija, y Murcia," the government, after he~rin~ the oninion of the Council of the Indi~a and in ecc;rdance~with the latter's recommendation, repealed, on the 17th of June, 1724, the codula of 1720 with, however, certain restrictions. Modifications were made in this measure by &n order of October 21, . 1726, which permitted for a period of one or two yc~ars, and later five, the importatj_on of Chinese silks as in f~rmer years, and empowering the Andaluzian commerci.:il inter·ests to name a representativ.e who would supervise the loading and unloading of the galleons at Acapulco, with a view to avo:lding tro,ns·· gressions~ This regulation went into effec~ on the 29th of August, 1727. 1 In 1732, the Marquis of CasafuertE-), who became Viceroy of Mexico, made known that he h:=i.d received from Dn. Jose Pasifio, by order of His Majesty, a memorial under date of 1727 on the Spnnish commerce, calling attention to the damages which wnre being caused by the existing regulation. In August 1731, the Viceroy received a new royal order re:3ulating in proper form the extension of the trade with America, 3 - In these expositions the point was brought out, among other things, tlE\t the :Manila-Acapulco trad0 did not cause any injury to the national industries of Sp~in, as tho merchants of Cadiz and Sevilla repeatedly alleged, for the manufacture o1 siPten fabrics was not ono of the truly national industries of the Peninsula. As a matter of fact, the greater portion of Jche silken fabrics brought from Spain were not from the mills of Spain but were imported into the Peninsula from England, France and Holland. The principal products of Spain such as wines, brandies, oil, wore not at all affect~d by the ]){Janila-Acapulco trade. (R~"t£.Q£iQ....hl.§toria1,, lbid.) -277- The order provided t~at no innovations were to be made until the five ytJar period of the existing regulation should o:::pirc~ but that thereafter the exnorts of merchandise were to be fixed in accordance ;ith the provisions of the cedula of 1720. It is unnec~ssary to overrute the discontent and alarm that this news produced in Manila. The expositions and controversies were repeated; it wns shown in an unquest ion~:ible :r.ianner tha~ the hc.rm that v1ould come to the commerce of the Philippines vJould not be of advantage at all to Spuin, but would be to foreigners, who at tho time were shipping in China goods valued at 4,000,000 pesos, for introdu~tion to America. The new delegates fr0m the Phili,µ5.nes, Dn. Lorenzo de Rugama y Pcotlacio and Dr. l'iiigl:el F0rn~1.ndez Munill2, at the SCI.me time set forth before the Court their arguments. Finally, after hearing n lor.:'; Teport from the Council of the Ind:i.a s, the Govern;,1ont in a cedula of April G, 1734, p:cornulgR.t ed at Buen Retiro, definitely allowed the importation of Chinese "l.l 1K "'O ) at the, S''r·11e-· t·1·r11e ,.,, e'ra-'--·ii··1r.r ·t,·ho- r;- 1rnum ·=·n101'n·t of the value of goods for Acapulco to 500,000 pesos · and thc:t of the return to 1,000,000 pecos in silver. \..I V (..l. . - ' .._,._,_ \ V ·-• C.... 0 ,..lt:J.... ' \-. - - . L:.\ - •.-! With the promulgE~tion of this decree, the intranquil ity of t.J.--·tE' rc.sidents of T·-'fanilc, c e::ls ed, ,s.nd the fc1rr1ous Aca.pulco galleon returned to it;3 norma.l state. 4 4 - Upon the supprecsion of the Acapulco galleon (the letst one left Mo.nila ir, 1811 and retnrned from Jka1J 1 llco in 1815), the trade was thrown open to private indivi~uals, In 1820, merch2nts 1-Hire :d.l.ovJ_~d to (D'.:port fr,)rn the Philippines, up to 750,000 pesos worth of goads anm1ally, with the privilege of using, besides Acapulco, the ports of San Blas, Guayaquil and Callao. · -278- Let us show in b1·i ef how the trade was conduct-ed. The governor-general was authorized to distri-bute as many boletas as there were compartments or divisions in the vessel, the number of which, on the average, was 1,500. A good portion of these belonged to the governor-general who was entitled to 45 toneladas, to the religious corporations, the re:ridores, and other privile 6 ed individuals. Many oi:' these, for one reason or another, sold their boletas to tho merchants. A gal'Ieon ranged from 1200 to 1600 tons. Its armament consisted of small pieces of artillery which usually were kept in the hold of the vessel to leave more space for the cargo. The bulk of the cargo consisted of Chinese arid Indian silks, cotton clot6s, and ornaments of ~old. These were sold in Acapulco at a profit of 100 10. The actual value of the cargo usually exceeded the limit fixed by law. Almost all the merchants borrowed money from the Obras Pias to invest in the Manila-Acapulco trade. In the return voyage, the galleon carried no less than two or three million pesos in silver. The arrival of a galleon in Manila was an occasion for much rejoicing and solemn festivities. Besides the situado from Mexico, those vessels carried official correspondence, arms and amri.,:unition, bulls and stamped paper, rµilita:r.y personal., missionaries and public officials. The salaries of the officers were fabulous. The commander, who held the title of general, received a royalty. The income of the captain was 40,000 pesos for each voyage; that of the pilot, some 20,000 pesos~ The ma§ter on board received a remuneration equiv~lent to g/o of the sal-es of t,he merchandise. This, t-oeether with what he gained from the merchandise which was brought in on his own account, gave him an income of no less than 350,000 peso 9 • ._..,.,.. __ _ -279- CHA? 'EER THPcEE THE BRITISH OCCUPA'l'ICN OF MA111LA (17G2-l?Gh) Montero y Vid-11, in the work aJ.ready citr)d, gives in the followh~g pc1.ssac;es t11e story of this i:3pisode of Philip·· pine 1-:istory. 1 ts a result of the Facto de Familia signed at Vers~illes, A~gust 25th, 1761, by Charles III of ,Spain and the .Jourbon Eini:i:s of i1'runc8, Nap:i.us; n,ncl Parma, Spain vrnnt to ·\·J.:tr on ag.-1inst Greet Jr::i.tnin, Janu,q1"y 1762. Certain Arner:j_an r,10rGhGnta from Eaclras informed the Archbishop (1\;an-,1~1 Antonio llojo) that preparations vJere '.)e:::_n::: rnn60 there :for t:1e capi~urc of 1"~ n . ·t · ,~ cervd ,_ ·· ... 1.ll : - v-~ ...·1 Orlv · • ,, •receJ.vea , •• ' J' 1_,_(:_;· ·t ·'-1.i;__.r ..., giv.i.r.t:; ' ·· ·' · 1 a r,a l .. L).. ,1. the same inform,:ttion, vvhilc the iUJg:usl~inia,1, F. Cuadrado,· recelved anoth1Jr which told of the dc:clar:.:ition of war between Encland and ~pain. On 6eptcrnber l\tL, 176~~, an English pnilebnt 7L, 1.-ie .... ; -,r·,r·-,..--.,-,-i·-:~7~r- p-1· ..L. i.. .( . ' appeared. at the bay o.f J\!I::1nila, .,.t ___ J ,L ,.J L, _, .L.I. : ._, .. \..:..: ._, ___.,,__~··· 1 - Chao'cer 12.. Th(; 0vent8 of tLj.s -::)( riod c1.re dn&lt v!ith :i.n r-:reater clet::til by various Somdsh· c.·.1_,t;101'itiot3: ?c6r·"J ,rordan ce 1-·-·T1r·i·a Urr·:o.,, C·i·ti'() 'T _.,·-~-, l'J·c:,·'-, j·,.'ir1-1·, ., J\''l)''t··1'11 °c1r ' ..L ~' i··1 .l. ~!_ ...____ __;,~_(.<.,.i:! ...C:::_1. ·:,.~2..,l~f ____ f~ ...}<~,_/:.. _~~-l) ,'.:) \..Jc.: .. .1.u:::t.1.!C 1n i-l~scfia ~:,obr, la i}Lw1·r,:i_ tle 7_,rn I,w::.uses, c1;11on.. c ~hur~,. A C~~Ic~Giono-Y"so u;_;:;c;-· dc1c1Lfii ~i:.""s-·rn:·-~~;i Jr:lT;J h O,'l :~:,Le C) Vent s of this u2riod j_s f,-.>1md in B. & H. Ii~ conta:L·1,s accounts of eyewi bwss es sncr1 c1 s Jo::·rds'h, Dr<J.p('r, u~c Arcl1bishupGovornor lfo,jo and Sinon do Anda y 8:..1.J,,.;zar. .,.:,.i 1. -2S-O- bay, obtained information of the number of wnr vessels present, and then left without paying the usual courtesies to tho authorities. Notwithstanding these warnings, the ArchbishopGovernor took no precautionary steps for the defence of Manila. On the 22nd of the same month, r.1.n English squadron of 13 war vessels, which the authorj_ties mistook for a fleet of Chinese champans, arrived at the bay of Mn nil a. 2 '11here were on board 1,500 European rnarj_nes armed with muskets, 800 Sepoys also· armed with muskets, and 1,400 la borers, a total of 6,830 men. 'rhe force was under the joint command of Samuel Cornish, Admiral of the fleet, and General William Draper, Commander of the land forces. Manila counted with only 550 available men of the garrison of the Rerr.::.miento del Re_y:3 and 80 native art ill eryrnen. Nevert.hE..:l ess the Government guve a negative reply to the rude demand for surrender. Without loss of time, it organized four companies of militia, of 60 men each, The English landed September 23rd, at the litt~e town of Malat e, 2-1/2 km. distant from Manila. They occupied without opposition the convent and church of the said town and the churches of En,1ita, San Juan de Bagumbayan and SantiD.go. On the 2/+th, tho main body of the British forces landed. The bastions of San Diego and San Andres ,opened .fire on the invaders, but their discharges had no effect against the strong walls of the churches and convents which th8 enemy -----=-2 - The British expeditionary force was despatthed f rom r'fadras, India, where the British had, shortl:;- bofore, won de· cisive victories over their F:ench rivals. 3 - The Regimiento d.el Rey was organized by Governor . Arandia in the year 1751+. It was composed of twenty companie of on~ hundred men each, under the co~mand of captains, li~· tenants and ensigns, The regiment, however, had never been brought up to maximum. strength, At the time the British arrj_ved, the Regimionto dol Rey was greatly reduced by death, by desertions and by the detail of some of the soldiers to duty on the galleons and other posts. --281- occupied. These solid edifices outside the walls greatly interfered with the defence of the city ••.• On the 3ctnle day ( 2L~th), a ga.11 ey entered the bay by way of Mari vcl es, having been cl.espa.tched from Palapag4 by the co~mander of the galleon FilipiPo, bearer of the funds from Acapulco • . A frigate &nd four ships of the enorn.y went out after her. In trying to escape, she stranded on the beach of Navotas. Her captui~ and a few passengors wore taken prisoners by the British. H~vi~g learned from the caotives of the situation of t&e Filipino, the Engllsh despatched vessels to look for it. The British Lliled to find the FilJpiDQ, but they captured inste1d, the Trinidad, taking from it a rich booty. Draper wrote the Archbishop demanding hi:3 rendition. To d:tscuss this demand, a council of war was held, under tlw prmddency of the Archbishop-Governor, at which were r,res/:rnt n:embers of the Real Audiencia, officers Of the armed forces, and oflicials ::>.f the city government. The council unanimou.sly resolved to defend the city to the last. On the 26th, 3,000 Indic1n lancers from the provinces of Pan~an~a, Bulacan and Lqguna arrived to aid in the dG.f enco of I'l'.fanila. On the 30th, six hundred more men from Bulac·an arrived, le,~l by J::,he capitanes and principales of their respective to~ns. The authorities of :Manila, forcseeinc the irr:minent capture of the city by the English, agreed, on the 1 st of October, to o.ppoint the rr:3.,::;istrate, Dr • .Simon de Anda y Salazar, as Lieut crwnt Governor and Captain General of the Islands, ••• so that he might pr,3s.erv0 the country's loyB.lty to, the King of Spain. , , • __ ____ _..,.__ 4 ~ Palapag is a ?Ort in northern Samar, The comrr:ander of the .f~lip~LJ19. :iacl been advis·ect by the viceroy of Nueva Esp~Ba of the outbreak of war between Spain and England and that he should. toke c:1.ll duo precautions, -282- Early in the morning of the 3rd, two thousand Pampangos sallied forth in three columns. The first under the command of Dn. Francisco Rodrir:ue z <1nd their brave corporal, ~funala3tas, occupi;d the church of Santiago, but upon being assaulted by the British, they made precipitatci retreat. The second, under the orders of D, Santiago Orendain, marched towards Ermita and.from there launched a surprise attack. The British repulsed the attack killing two hundred Indians, Orendain saved himself by fleeing from the t3cene of the combat, a conduct which aroused against him suspicions of treachery. The third column led by the volunteers, Eslava and Justo, and supported by two l)1c!rnts of musketeers, ·was to have attacked by way of the seashore, but it. was unable to fight. M.any- Incaanc from the provinces, discourc1.ged by the ill-success of this attempt, and, above al-1, because the En:;:lishmen, in reprisal of the loss of some of their officials, hanged rr.oro than seventy Pampangos, returned to t, heir respective towns. At dawn of the fourth, Admiral Cornish ordered three vessels to approach and shell the city. Their guns together with those of the Camp 3t Sun.tiago and Bagumbayan openod a breach on, the walls. Drap0r then sent a third message to the Archbishop-Governor demanding anew the surrender of the city, The council of war insisted on its resolve to defend the city to the last. At thG same time it ~ommanded the treasurer, Dn. Nicolas de Echauz, to depart for the town of Paet~1, Lagurw, with the sum of 222,000 escudos which he was to keep in safety, The open.breach on the wall was defended by officer Fallet, a French officer in the service of Spain, He turned traitor and facilitated the assau]. t of the eneray through that point. A column under the command of ,Tlfayor Felt 1 ed the assault through the breoch without difficulty or opposition early in the morning of October 5th, 'I'his colurm opened the gates of the city to two other columns which penetrated the walled precinct, sowing on its path destruction and death. --2$3- A company of Spanish militiamen on guard at the Royal gate was s1.u':)rj_sed ar.d inhuma:,ily put to the sword. 'l'he pe:cturhed residents of Mo.Pila in tumult rushed to all streets and avf3nues towards the P:,u.d.g hopin.3 to save th0rnsel ves by swimming or to cross in lizht canoes t0 the oppo3ite shore. An enemy column opened fire on these unfortunates. While tho frightful olaur:;hter was 6 oir.g or1, Drc:p0r advanced at the heed 0f E, third column by way of Cello Heal towards tte palace. H3ving taken possession of the pal El c e, he desr-,atched Col. lvluEs0n -~o d 0mo.Ld from tho Archbishop his surrender. Rojo, presented to Col. Munson a no'ce proposing terms of surrender. 'J.1:b..e proposals were as follows: 1) Security of peruon and property for all in- habitants bf the country. 2) F'ree exercise of the CathoJ.ic reli/~;ion throughout the Archipelugo, 3) Fre8dom oi.' indu::.:try and commeri::o for all the inhabitants of tno country. 4) Preservation of the Real Audie~cia to administer justic0 in the name of his Catholic Maj osty. 5) Recognition of the ranks and preservation of the Spanish garrison of tho city. The c:onditions. undE~r which Manila finally t::,'.lpitulated, October 5, 1762, were as follows~ 5 Art. 1 - The Spanish officers of every ro.nk shall be esteemed au prisoners of war, u;;-io11 t,:icir parole of honour, ~ut shull have the liba1~y of wearing their swords. Th0 rest of the t~oops, of every degree and quality, must be disarmed, disposed of as we think proper. They shall be tre£,tod vdth humo.nity, Art. 2 - ALL the mil:l.tary sto1•fls, c.tnd mo.e;azipe~ of every kind, must be surrendered, faithfully, _______ , 5 - B. &:, R., Vol. 4,9. -284- to our Commisaries, and nothing secreted or damaged, Art. 3 - His Excellency the Governor·must send immediate orders to the fort of Cavite, and the othor forts under his command, and dependent upon Manila, to surrender to His B:d.tanni.c Ma.jesty, Art. 4 - Tho propositions contained in the paper delivered on the part of his Excellency the Governor, and hi,s council, T1JJ.ll bs listened to, and confirmed to them, upon their payment of four mill ::i_or:s of dollars, the half to be paid irnrnedj.atel y, the other half to be paid in a time to be agreed upon, and hostages and security given for that purpose, The English commander gave the city to threehour pillage which was prolonged for more than twenty four hours. While it lasted the drunken soldiery committ,ed great outragGs, violating women, robbing houses and destroying obj~cts of art in churches and public edifices, assisted in this nefariou~ act by the Chinese and prisoners, whom the English imprudently set free. 2~ 1 Anda and the British.~ D. Simon de Anda y Salazar, who had accepted with enthusiasm the honorable mission to maint2.in the Islands for Spain, had left. J\J'.tanila at 10 o'clock in the evening of October 4, He arrived at Bulacan at dawn of the 5th. Immediately he nssembled in session the Alcalde MB.yor, D. Jose ?2sar:Ln, the provincial of the Agustinians~ Fr. Remigio Hernandez, the ex-provincial, Fr. Aguirire, other religiou~::;, a.s wuJ.l al.i the Spanish residents of the province and the native autho1·itics~ Exhibiting his titles of Lieutenant Governor 2nd Captain General, and Judge Visitor general he called upon all to hilp resist the invaders and to.defend at all cost the native territory. In the afternoon, news arrived that the English had taken Manila. Uhereupon, in considoration of the realities of the situation, the Auditors bein3 held prisoners, -and in fulfillment of the laws of the 1 .,. Montero y Viclnl, Q.12., £_:Lt., Val, 2, chap tor 2, -285- Indias which prescribe that the Real Audiencia be conserved in only one Auditor, and also of thG provisions of the law ~hich prescribes that in the ~b.s enc e of the Governor nnd Captain-General of the Indias, those positions are to devolve on the Audiencia, Anda procluimed himself Governor and Capt:1in Qc,nerc:,.L, OJ'' 1-<·1·7 ·,,·,1'r1-"'S 2 -A I,,,., .,. C), • J." _,_ ··'-,:_~ --~~ ..... 2 - Tht.i lmvs refcJrTed to hore are as follows: .(a) La-;,v 57 of the Recopilaci J[!, chapter 15, book 2, ena.cted lVIay 25, 1596, recnacted April J, 1629: (vol. 49 B. & R., p, 135 footnote), "We order tho.t in the absence of the president or viceroy, so that he cannot govern, our royal Audioncias succeed to the government, and t:b..at the ~overnment resid-e in them, as it could in the viceroy &r president when they performed those duties, 'nie senior anditor t~hall be prosidm1t, and he alone shall make and enact all the measur0s belonging to 1 and annexed to the president. And if the president should be captnin-gr:meral, tt18 senior a 1.1ditor Gball aJ.~o exercise that office until his succesaor is appointed 07 w.:3, or until one is sent who shall have powers to act as such by our our orders, unless the opposite or contrnry is ordered in some Audiencia by the laws of this book." (b) Law 58 of the .f/.eQ.Q.J2._ilacio,n, book 2, chaptc~r 15, eno,.cted April 2, 1664: (vol. ~.'i, 3, & R., p, 31.3.) "Inasmuch as reprosent:.~tio:::i has b0en made to us of the inconvenience resulting from the vic0roys of Nucva Espaila anticiputing appointrnBnts among persons who reside in the Phi1ippin8 Is1.::;nds so th,1t, in case of the) nbsonce of th0 prt3~:dd E:nt or ':;;ovcrnor and captnin g enera1 of the Islands, those persons rrl::ry enter upon and u::er~ise those charges until the arrival of the person who is to govern - ad interim or by royal appointment a~cordinP;ly as we may decide; there.fore -we order r.nd cornm:md th:;.t in co.se of the absence of the govornor and C8ptain general of these Islands, by de3th or any other accident, our royal Audiencia shall govern them in political af~airs und tho senior Auditor in military. Wo order th8 vic<:iroy of Nueva Espana to use no longer tlrn nuthority that he h2s had hitherto by virtue of our Decree of Sept. 13, 160S, und the other decrei:~d given to him, to ne-w po:rsons appointed oy means of the ways hith0rto practised." -286He ~t once set out for Bacolor, capital of Pampanga, and performed the same act. With marvel .... ous diligence he made preparations for tho heroic struggle which wa3 to imr.1ortaJ.ize his name. He organized companies of volunteers placing them under experienced soldiers who trained them in the 1-1.r.rn of arms, and he improvised gunpowder factories and foundries. Immediately ho took the offensive against thf'J British. He forbade the ned..ghboring towns to fJend provisions to I,ianila; he made himself master of advantageous positions in Bulacan and Pasig; he built trenches; and he heJ.d in check the boastful tnvaders, forcing them to remain within the walled city, In order to cotmteract the power and a:uthor·ity of Anda, the British entered into an agreement with the Archbishop whereby thG latter wu's to rc:ta:Ln control of the poiitical 3overnment, with themselves managing militnry affeirc. The Archbi,'3hop um·Jittingly fell into the trap, even going so fnr as to attempt to havD th8 Spaniards and Filipinos submit to the sovereignty of Great Britain. He even ordered Anda to comply with the treaties which he had concluded with the English. In answer to this cownrdly conduct, Anda forbade compliance with any order of the Archbishop tenciing to subject the Islands to the domination of England. With such elegant proofs of character and civic valor, day by day incre::1:·rncl the popularity of this heroic magistrate, ar:.; did the size and strengtll of his fbrces. A brave Asturian, D. Pedro Jose de Busto, who at, the time of tlu.:i capture of JYbnila and of the issuance of the call of Anda, was engaged in.the exploitation of thE Angat {Bulacan} iron mines, offered himself, at tho head of his wol'kmen, at the service of that illustrious patrici3n, of ( c) Law 180 t~t: 7' ~, book ~, th_: 3,e;~zjlag_iQ.D., enacted August 14, 16/.~0. \vol. 49 B. &, R. 1) . l_:,.,.1 .Loo ,Jnote.} "In some of our Aucl.iencias of the India.r.;, it hns happened, mid it might happen, that the auditor.s of it,' ri1ay be absent, and only -:JnE: aud:l.tor remain. : \ifo declare in such case that the Audiencia is to be conserved aud contained with only one auditor." -287 - Having occupied the environs of Pasig, Busto hindered the shipment of provisions to }~nila from Lu La3una, Draper, aware of the grave cons0quonces of this resistance, planned to assault the rebels. Hi::: purpose was to rGnder free the navigation of the Pasig river. Witb this end in view, ThomafJ :aackhousc loft Manila on the 8th of 1fovembor. At Maibonga ho had a skirmish with Busto. The latter WB.S forced to retire to Mario,uinn. v1ith his rnr.m. The .i:!:nglish crossed the river and despatched an envoy to the natives of Pasig to demand thoir submission. The gobernado:rcillo of this town replied, with more arrogunce than prudence, that Pa[d.g 1v:::1.s not like ManiJo., and that if the Spaniards treacherously delivered the latter, he would defend his town. The British att&cked, and the Indians fled in ~reat disorder. Somo savod them§elves by swimming across the Bamban ri·Jer; but those who remained were iniquitously put to tlie award. Sultan Ali-~1din happened to be in Pasi~ nt the time, was taken prisoner. The British fortified themselves in Pasig, which they occupi~d for the duration of the war. Draper believed that it was an easy task to bring the ?hilippine Islands under the rule of his country with the submission of the Archbishop nnd high officials of the Government, But he realized that ht=J was in error a.s Anda remained povrnrful in Bulacan and Parr.i:ianga, ::1raper decided to invade the • .. ,., • h .,.oc:1 1 d er J... n 1.1is . own provinces an.a.l attaci<., t:w .::i:9ar11.s camp. On January 15, 1763, an expedit:Lor:.ary force under Slay, Captain of grenadiers, se~ cut for 3u11 Ten vessels c£~rrisd to the t()Wl~ of Nalolacan. 1os four hundrE·d :Snglishmen, three hu :idrc~d M'llabar 1\fogros, and ·i.:,wo thousand Chinese rebels vlith arms and munitions, They occupied the ccnvcmt and church of th~ Agustinian fathers, and there t~ey ramained three days gathe:d.l\'!: dato. rogording our forco:J; data which were furnished, with manifest tre,1chery and villainy by the Chinese and mestizos. From thomJ the British learned how small our force was, which consisted only of 'ninetecm Spaniard[3, three hundred armed Indianr,, six falconets and one canon of regular calibre, which was mounted on the belfry of the 0 -288church of Bulacan, and three and one-half-arrobas of powder. nJ Slay was to have gone directly to Bulacan, but because of contrary winds, he proceeded by way of Pumarana and the inlets which connect with l1alolos. To reach Bulacan, fearing an ambuscade, 11 they went across the rioe fields, f':i.ring riflo shots at the bamboo groves lest there be people hiding there• Ii p • zuniga. ,. . . in. Busto learned of the size of the :2::nglish force, and, know'ing that he did not 'havo sufficient force to engage th0m, he decided to abandon Bulacan. But the ale al de 1/fayor, the curate 1 a Recollect. friar who happened to be there, and the artillery officer, Ibarra, did not accept his plan. '1 hey wanted to defend the convent and the church. 1 As the vanguard of the ene~y, made up of traitorous Chinese, reached the bridge, of Maysantor, Ibarra fired from the belfry with such perfect uim that he disabled more than one thousand Chinese. But a cannon ball from the enemy carried off the head of the valiant Ibarra, and the Indians grew faint-hearted in their defense. The Alcalde Mayor also was hit on the breast and died within a few hours. The enemy captured the convent, putttng to the sword all who were found therein. The curate of Bulacan, Fr~y Jose Andres was speared to death as weil as a multitude of defenseless Indians. The ReGollect father tried tq es·cape, but found only doath in the attempt. The British after setting fire to th0 church and convent returned to J.1,1anila with more shame than glory. • •• In the meantimet house or Becus, as the Laguna and Batangas in to have been landed by the commander a·t Pasig, BackSpaniards called hi@, went to search of the money believed the galleon FiliPt.rt~, At the 3 - Notes from the manuscript of P. Stu. J.l!Iaria exist· ing in the archives of the Sc1n Agustin Convent, fJianila. -2S9mouth of Tae:uig tlL Ind.ions sunk n few champans to obstruct the entrnnce of tho Britioh to the L~guna Lake, which obstruction Becmi earJ:i.ly ror:iovod, Becus traversed v~rious towns of tha two above-men- tioned Lipa, object ssa to panga, pr~vinces, .seizing three thousand pesos in Having laarnod that the money, which was the of his expedition, had been transported by Santor) a town on th~ contr&-c~sta of Pamhe returned to PasiG, I The r.Gcc.dpt of the 3,000,000 posos which constituted the main cargo of the Fil~pino, enabled Anda~ tu form a rcspectabl e mil i.tary for·c e, consistiD:'"T, of five hundred Spaniards; three hundred Franch deserters from the EngJ.ish camp, and .four thousand armed Indians, With such o force, Anda ordered Busto toestablish his headquarters at llfal:inta, 7 kilo,·,1eters distant from .rv:anila. Busto strengthened this place with redoubts and palisades and mount eel on it. fi vo small pieces of cannon. The French sar[eant Bret~fia, who was one of the deserters from the enemy camp, directed the construction works, From MalintD., Busto rnado incc:1sfJ.1.nt incursions into the environs of Mctnila to tht~ annoyanc c of thtJ enemy. An English forcEi under Drake s;illier.l forth again~t him in June, 1763, On reaching the environs of Malinta, they open8d firo against tho SJaniartls, The latter formed th(~msel v·os in line o:Z bDttJ.e and fired 6ff the small pieces of artillery which defended their camp. Tho crook of l:i[c::tysilc sr~po.ratf.Hl the cdv,ibatant s, .::n:i.d thir- neither tL.e ono no:".' the other dared to cross. 11 Both vJere prud :mt enough to remain on their :i. 1:!spective r3ides of tho rivor, thus saving the lives of thoir soldier.::;. 11 ( P. lYiartinoz de Zuniga). · Two or four of Bustos mon d:i.ed and 1 seven wounded, of whom five. J.ater died, The English suffered the loss of t~irteen wounded, of whom .five or .s ix, 1 at or di G cL • •• On July 3, 1763, an English frigate anchored o.t the Bay bringing copiE:s of the armistice Teachod by France, Spain and En.g:1.and. On the 23rd came news of the sir.;ning of tho pr,)tocol, '11he Enr;lish vwuld not recognize any aut,hority except that of tho Archbishop, their ·:rnr pri:::;on0r. -290- Hence, they delivered the papers to him, Rojo informed the British that "in matters of such grave concern, they should deal directly with Anda," On the arrival on August 26, of new copies of the protocol, the Enclish leader transmitted them sealed to Anda as 11 Commander-in-Chief of' the forces of His Catholic Majesty." Anda re.fused to receive them as the title of Captain General was omitted, Whereupon, the British, in a proclamation issuGd on the 19th of S0ptomber, 1763, made it known that they were ready to suspend hostilities o.nd that it v1as up to Anda to prevent the further shedding of blood. To this proclanation Anda replied (E:ieptumber 2a, 1763) from Bacolor that he was not advised in a formal manner of the protocol; that it lJa.s tho1:e who, following a course which did not accord with the orders of the sovereign, prevented indirectly their execution, should be held responsible for the eonsoquences. Anda, who then had under his command a large force equipped with considerable supply ol' ammunition, transferred his headquarters to Polo, 9 kilometers distant from tfunila- From there he kept the English practically isolated within the walls of ffunila, causing them to suffer fr_om. extreme want. On the 30th of January; 1764, Archbishqp Rojo, died. The English gc::ve him a solemn funeral, their troops paying him military honors •••• A few days later~ Anda received, via China, despatches froLi the King of Spain, informing him of the conclusion of a treaty of peace wi;th the King of .England.liImmediately, Anda transmitted this des- -------4 - The preliminary peace treaty was signed in Novem- ber, 1762. The definitive treaty of peace was signed at Paris, February 10 1763. 1bis was the famous Treaty of Paris of February 1763, which made important territorial adjustments in different parts of the ·world. At the peace conference, it was arranged, aniong other thint;s, that Spain was to cede Florida to England and, in return, to retain her sovereignty over the Philippine Islands. io, -291- patch to the English'iovernor, proposing to him the appointment of a mixed commission to arrange for the formal surrender of the city. The commission arranged the formalities in the town of Tombobong. Later, another English vessel arrived with orders for th$ evacuation of thf; city. /.bout tl::e same time the frigate Sta. Rosa arrived at ll'larinduque bring• ing with her a new governor-generc.il, D. Francisco de la 'rorre. To him Anda spontaneously surrencle:ced surrendered his authority, J.V1..arch 16, 1764, •• , La Torre, desirous of allowing Anda to enjoy the honor he very well deserved of recetvin,z the keys of the city, pretr.mded he was ill, and tbe brave lead .. er had the satisfr.1ction of making his triumphal entry to Manila at the head of' his troops and with military pomp, and to hoist the Spaninh flag at li'prt Santiago, amidst booms of cannon. ·--- ... --- '"'92 - -.G CHAPTER FOUR FILIPINO REVOLTS DURING THE 18TH CENTURY 1. The 1745-1746 Uprisings. In the eighteenth century, as in the precoclh1g ones, uprisings of a more or less serious natur8 occurred in dif~ ferent parts of the Philippines. As in the p&st, the old sources of popular discontent, the exnction of the tribute and the imposition of personal services, hacl. much to do in bringing about these revolts. In the eighteenth century, however, other fuctors arose which, together with the grievances over the tribute and the polos y servicios, provoked the people to acts of violence and defiance against constituted authorities. The uprisings of 171+5-1746, which occurrecl during the governorship of Gaspar de la Torre, were an outgrowth of controversies over land boundaries in many provinces of Central Luzon - Batangas, Cavit e, l'fJ.anila and Bulc1can. The story of the Batangas uprising is told by Concepcion in his Histori 53 General de Filj12,,i]1Q.§.. deals with th~t incident: 1 The follovdng passage -293- "With the pretext thnt the fathers of the Society (of Jesus) had usurped from them cultivated lands, and the untilled lands on the hills, on which they kept enormous rwrds of horned cattle -- for which reason, and because the Jesuits said that these were their own property, they would not allow the natives to supply themselves with wood, rattans, and bamboos, unless they pnid fixed prices -- the Indians committed shocking acts of hostility on the ranches of Lian and No.sugbu, killing &nd plun'.lerin':s the tt=:mants of those lands, with many other rnvages. Nor did they respect the houses of the (Jesuit) fathers, but attacked and plundered them, and partly burned them, ns well as many other buildings independent of these." All was plunderinz, rapine, destruction, and debauchery; the natives also rebelled against the exactions from them of tribute nnd personal services. llThe contagion spread to the village of Taal, and more than sparks were discovered in other pl3ces, although efforts were made to conceal the fire. 11 The alcaldemayor and the Jesuits tried at first to pacify the Indians, urging them to wait for the official visit of Auditor Calderon.; but they could do noth:i.ng, the nativeEJ being rendered only more'uaring by this o.ttJempt. Troops wore t::-wn sent from KJnila agD inst them; in the battle mentioned in our text several were wounded, among them the comii1anding: officer, Sar;z;ento-rnayor Juan Gonzo.lez de el Pulgar; but he succeeded j_n routing the enemy, The cl-iief of the insur6 ents, one Ma.tienza, took refuge in a church, but was captured and disarmed. thurein. Reenforcoments were sent from I-!Ianila, and the rebellion was soon quelled. The leaders of the rebellion w0re punished in v&rious ways, according to their prominence or influence; ~rnme were shot, others sent into exile or to the galleys; and arnnesty was granted to the j_nsure;ents who wonld lA.y down their arms and renew their acknmvlcdgment of vassalage~" _______ , ral de FilJ;:)JblS, (ManiJ.a-Sampaloc, 1'/88-1?92), l~- vols. 'Concepcion' s Histo,r:y from vvhich the fore<T,oing 3.8count is taken, is a detailed history of the Philippines. Although it abounds in trifling matters, it is a veritable mine of information anct, as ~mch, is a work of great hiutoricciJ. j_mporto.nc e. -291+- On the disturbances which occurred about the same time in other provinces, nn irnportan-t;, sourc~ of information is the Royal Decree of Hovember 7, 1751. decree follows: The full text of this 1 To the president and t:rnditors of my royal Audiencia of the Filipin0 s Islands, resident in the city of Manila: Don Pedro Enriguez, an auditor of that same Audiencia, metde a report, with sworn statements of his proceedings, of what he had done under the commission which was conferred on him by the government there for the pacification of the villages of Taguig, Hagonoy, Parafiaque, Bacoor, Cavite el Viejo, and other places attached to them which lie near that capital, all which had revolted. (He reports that) they were pncified by merely the proclamation of a general pardon {except to the chief instigators of the revolt) which he published, and by the promise that their complaints should be heard and justice done to them; but the village of San Mateo Glso revolted, and he procoeded to its puni3hmcnt and left it in ruins, becaune·the people had not surrendered their arms; it was, however, already (re) peopled with inhabitants who were more numerous and of more peaceable disposition. A similar insurrection or revolt occurred in most of the villages of tho provirce of Bulacan, and these like the former, by nn agreement which they had .forE1ed :Jy a public writing with the village of Silang protosted, as they aftorwa1"d made evident in their petitions, against the injuries which the Indians received from th0 managers of the estates which are owned by the religious of St. Dominic and those of St. Augustine, both calced and diqcalced -- usurping the lands of the Indians, without leaving them the freedom of the riiers for their fishing, or allowin,(\ them to cut wood for their necessary use, or even to collect the wild fruits; nor did they allow the natives to pasture on the hills near their villages t.he carabaos which they used for 1 - B • &, R. , vol • 48 , pp • 27 - 34. -295- agriculture. Accordingly,(the said auditor) determined to free then from these oppressions, and decided that they should not pay various unjust taxes which the m,'.1.nagers e:xDcted from them. Having proved to be capable in the other task assigned him, he received a commission as subdelege1te judge of the adjustment of land-titles, in consequence. of ~hich he demanded from the aforesaid relieious orders the titles of ownership for the l~nds which they poss0ssed; and, notwithstanding the resistance that they made to him, repeatedly refusine (to obey), he distributed to the villages the land_s which the orders hnd usurped, and all which they held without lecitimate cause he declared to be crown lands ( re0.l <~ngas) - as occurred with the convent of San Pablo, belonging to the colced religious of St. Augustine, assigning to it (i.e., the crown) a farm for horned cattle Jnd two caballerias of land which were supposed to belong to it, according to the testimony of the village of' San Ifateo. He also took other measures which seemed to him proper for thG invostip;c~tion of tlle fr,]uC::.ulent l n ~h~ ~ t1r~n·1~nt n°-thP ~~P . J.,,:., E.) ..ill ,8c,0 .. \.:;.8i. ~J. ,.~ l~nrin J I Proc Re·di'·nryS estate of Bifian, which is owned by the relizious of St. Dominic -- fraud which w&s cnnwitted in the year 1743 by the, court cl·Jrk o.f that Audienc::i.3. (of l\/f,3.rd.la) with notubJ.e fraud and trickery, in which p,?rticipc1ted the two s1.H'VGyon=: ( appointed through ic;nor.::.m.c e or evil intent), to ths grave injury of the vi~lase of Silang. This had caused the disturbances, revolts, and losses which had been experienced in th8 above-mentioned villages. The afore3a~d proceedings (by t~D auditor) were considered and exsmined with the closest attention in my Council of the Indias, with th9 decrees that were also sent by the Audicncia there in the co1:1rse of the :p!'oceedings in a s,~cond rppe,1l int,\;rposed by tllf~ vi:lc:it;1;e of Siltmg -··- decrc1cis obte.ined in that suit by the natives of tllet vi] la~c o.gninot the college of Snnto Tomas do Aquino, in regard to lc1.nds usuroed (f:tom theni) and annexed to tho estate ·of Binan, {1Jhich the religious own. On the :.:ubject of the disturbance among the aforesa:Lri IndJ.uns, Governor Don Gaspar de la Torre, his successor the bishop of Nueva Se~ovia, and the provinci.~J.s of the aforesaid rcligiout orders set forth the allegations made in tho name of the orders by Father Fray Micuel Viva:s as their :procurutor-gfmeral at this court, and ~ 0 0 l, __ .• 0 .,;.,Cl,ll .. ,::, .. _ ,1 vL~ ,1 -?96J h• by Father Pedro Altamirano, who acts in that capa- city for the Society of Jesus for its provinces of the Indias (on the point that the province of San lgnacio in these islands had no share in the commo. ' th ·11 ages, as was snown ' 'oy various . t tions in . ose v1_ ·Jestimonies), and the explanations made by my fiscal, who was cognizan'c of the wholu matter. It has th(;refore appeared expedient to me to advise you of the receipt of your letters of July 30, 17h5, and July 17, 1746, and of the acts which accompany them; and to notify you that by a despatch of this date I approve, and regard as just and proper, all that was performed by the aforesaid Don Pedro Calderon Enriquez in virtue of the commission and appointment which was conferred upon him by Governor Don Gaspar de la Torre by the advice of the Audiencia thore, in order that ho might proceed to the pacification of the insurgent villages in the jurisdictions of SiLmg, Imus and Snn Nicolas, Cavit e el V:Lcj o, o.nd the other districts wlr~ch united on account of the con·· troversy over the ownership of the lands which the rel igious-Dom;inic ans, and both calc ed and discalced Angustinians -~· are endeavoring to keep. I also give him thanks for the judicious conduct and measures which he employed for the .aforesaid pacification; and I :Likewis1:) approve what he accompli;Jhed ns subdeleeate jud;;e of t}1e settlement of land-t:Ltles, in regard to the survey nnd boundaries of the estates which, in accordance with their ler.r,itill1-3.te titles, belong to each of those orders, in view of the more accurate cJ.nd reliable information (obtained) from the interpretations of the four surv~yoro whom he appointed -- the latter be:i.ring in mind, to this end, thu measures put into execution by the cmditor Ozaeta in the year 1699, in nccordance with the chart P:r:'inted by the pilot Bueno, in his book entitled. Nave.e:acion e,specula_t_iva v prcictica (i.e., "Na-vigation, theoretical anc't practical "J( which ch:H't serves in those islands a:3 the ;::;tandarcl for th(:i curvovs) -_,_.h· ··t·_, 1,•hi·c·1"·1 ·'oeas sjgnin0· to tl·1e ·:ifore" "''-1.·Ld re11·.a'i·o-u"' 4,~ l.J t...i lanes to th$m by their (legal) fitlcs, which is the smne that was ordained in the executory Cucree despatched by the Audiencia there. I also approve what he did in adjudgin,g to my royaJ. crown the lands which the aforesaid religious orders hart usurps~, and in alloting lands to the Indians for the sum of two - · ·· [_,- - CL.... C}(. - . i,.,) .l IY. -- ,.• -297- thousand pesos, at times and terms stipulated with them, From the aforesaid investigations char~es resulted against Don Junn Ifunroy, ;ourt clerk ~f that Audiencia, who was enfaged in the survey and adjustnwnt of boundnrics mc:icle in tr:ose s.J.m8 l2nds of :i3:.iiDn in the year 1743 -- in which, by the declarati~n of the two surveyors who took part in it, is evident their ignorance of such wor~, and of the r~~cs and measures (to be used}. Although (~Q·, after?) the lands had been measured and a chart of th9 osta~es had b Gen drawn, the cornput:;tions wero n:aclc:: by the said Monroy, and the, surveyon, sicned it, supr:,o:3:i.11g that it was correct; but it was acknm,1ledfi:ec1 th8.t in that same Jnar, lbter, another survey and ad.justrncmt of boundaries was made bv the aforosaicl. court clerk and one of the s:::id S~.lrVeyors on some letnds OVCr Which were lawsuits -- some, in particular, uith the religious of 3t. Augustine -- in 1-vhich survey there was assigned to each cattlo-f3rrn 3,024,574 souare bra3as of land, thi$ being different f~om the pre7ious survey, which was con~uted at 8,695,652 braz3s. In this was proved the .fra.ucl 1i:Lth 1r,1rdc}1 the si::id I~Ionroy Etcted, in r;iving to the said relj_gious more than hc:.lf of the 1__ an ··, d ,.;·JJ!lC h b rl· · ·· ,, L,Q c,..: J.an,~,. · .,. A' r-...,coru._llc ' +·i - r:rl .i/, · -··-it l1,l..) ·: "' .. ) .onto•=appearod to ri1e proper to com6cmn him to two :rears' suspension from his of:ice, and to lay upon him a fine of two thousund Jecos, opplied to the fund of fines poid ::..nto the royc.l tror,sury; and for this o::action there is issued, on this s~me dute, tho proper despatch to the Hurque::., de '1egalia, a wtnister of the 1,., • .l.., IJ.L said my countil and tribunal of the Ind~es, nnd exclusive jud3e of rcnt3, settleroent cf ~ard-~itlos, and co:lection of fines and conde12n3tions. By another despatch of the s&me dat.e, t;hu r;;u,rcrrnnr~iit of those islands is commanded 1·,o ex<2rr·is·:: r·E:reaf'ter the utniost vigil.cmce in order that t~w Indl.,::;,ns o:C' the srdd villagcis may not b(~ molented by ,)-1e roJ. igio112, and that tho le.tter shal.l be kept in cl-wc 1{ ·,_n the unjust c1cts wrdci1 they cay in future ,1t,·[:.c1T1~)::, afairn::;t not only those Indi2ns but other nntivas of ~l~se islands. In this, the government nrust alwcys bear in mid ::,·'·'· ·····-,.;i ,. ,. d---~., t::,lV<...,n ·· ,·, · -1-'-, (OJ.. "' 1 -·"' ... n . th, . e re.Lt,er a\Jcci co,;w-ii.:J.n J.n t,J.1L 1.<..-<W,., ''G,-ie l • } 'h f' ~ d ' ' ' empire , D.no. ·c .. i.e ... roc.uent roy::u r e<:rees "Litiac h nve been issued, to the end th2t the InCiRus shall be well J ' -298- treated and shall not suffer oppression or extortion; and shall direct that my fiscal there shall appear as their representative ond in their defense on every occasion which shall present itself in this regard. Considering how important it is that the Indians shall ~now of the recourse which they can have when they are oppressed or ill-treoted, and in their ~ontroVf::lrsies, it vrnuld be very expedient that the government give them information of this, so that they may not be ignorant thereof, and that they may use these (peaceable) means without going to the extreme, as they did on this occasion, by employing- armed force, For this time, my royal charity and cleniency overlooks their proceedings, considering their heedless disposition; but when they shall have been advised of what they ought to do in such cases, and in others of a different nature, if they fail to use those means they shu.11 be chastised with the utmost SEWerity. I hove resolved to notify you of this, in order that you may be acquainted w:ith this my royal decision, and in order that, so far as you are concernod, you may make known my decreG; o.nd I command the most prompt and effGctive measures, to the end that it may be fully and duly carried into effect; for such is my will. Dated at San Lorenzo, on November 7, 1751. I THE KING. 2. Filipino Revolts During the British Occupation. The fall of Manil2. into the) hands of the British creat· ed for Spanish sovereignty in the Philippines a grave situation. The prestige of Spain as a sovere:Lsn nation was lowered in the estimation of many people. Consequently, those who were discontented, for one reason or another, with the Spanish colonlal rule weru encourar:;ed to attempt to -299overthrow that rule. In many provinces of the Philippines sue h attempts W(;rc mu clc. Of these, the ones that guve the greatest cor..ccrn to Andu' s government were the Pc:nga:.3inan and the !locos revolts. The story of tho Pangasino..n rGvolt ic told by Montero y Vidal in the following passages from his Historica General . •. ~1.rws. 1 de F ·"] 1 _ip Whil.r~ Anda wc1s fighting against tr:.e Ji::L?:1:L,li, various provinces rose in revolt. Tho people wanted, for one thing, to emancipate themselves from Spain. '.L'hey took advantage o.f the si tu:1ti.on to ov,-;,~:::-:c .Jr;r·sonal wron~~ and to free themselves from the tyranny of opprestdv0: officials, of hat(;d priests, and of tlH?ir local chieftc:dns (mu.nicip9s) and ca.be:,~uD do baranc;oy, 2s -well a,s from the :~ribute and personal ccirvic2s. In ?c:me:asinar: ·;: hG town of Bj_nalat:.ofr3an too~: up arrns 1 Novombcr 3, 1762, the rebel;:_; dem.nding the remov3~ of the tri~ute u~d the Alcalde mayor, ~nd the :::ubstitution of the justices or municipos ol' the towns. Moreover, tlwy wanted the Spaniardn to n.'bm1dcn _t nc pro vine e disrc\'tc:rdinr: the counsel, requests ~,rf··u·1~- ....sup·o' ·c,·!- ..·, ()l' ~ ·)f tl-1° f'a·t11er· D,orn·1 r·i CP'•l'' ~- 1 ; C u 0' who took chargo of the cur8 of souls in tho prov~.nce. ;:,_r,d ...:-1 ... ·!· V 0\"::.CA ~ ..1_ U .... .L),_; L -·· - V ..1.. ... ,., ,.... J..... ,..:1,.,_ Andn commissioned D. Ju&n Antonio Pai·ielo ·Lio go to Pangasinan to investig:xt; e ( re.:::Ldonciar) the chief of tlw pro-wince, D. Joaquin Gambon, who was nccur.:;f3d of arousin~ the passions of tbe Indians by his ilJ.eral exactions, 1 - Chapter 3, vol, ?,. A contemporary nccDunt of the Pangasinan revolt which Montoro y Vidal used is Hictoria del 2lzam:i,cnto de Pnnr:o..sinan (manuscript) by- Juan Baut{sto de TI:suot:fnT:in)-.-,rho author W3s curate in various oueblos of !locos, and, at one tima, servod as actinr bishop.of Nuovn Se3ovia. Areuoceso -300- Gamboa, as well as Commissioner Panela, and the Vicar, Fr. Andres 1,:Ielendez, had to meet come of the demandE; of the Indians. One of the concessions grantod was the appointment as.master of camp, or supreme chief of the municipalities, of the Indian, Andres Lopez. D. Sebastian Navarro and the Alcalde pedaneo, D. Jose Quirm1te placed themselves at t.he h(rn.d of a loyal group to put down the uprising; Anda doDpatched for the same purpose an expedition, consisting of forty Spaniards, u ~,guudron of horsemen from Pampunga, . . . d mi· 1 J.. t,ia, . . a regiment 01"' improvise an d a f'l y1.ng par t y from the province of Bataan, under the comrnnnd of D. Fernando de Arayat, rrhe rebels, 10,000 strong, were asc.embl(:!d at Boyambang to prevent the pasE;age of troops across the Agno, Arayat took their positions, put them to flight, punished the nearest tovms, nnd then roturned to headquarters at Bacolor. In the fight four Spaniurds and several Indians from Cagayan were killed. Following tho departure of Arayat, the insurrection v-ia s rcne':Jed under the 1 eadership of Juan do la Cruz Palaris, native of Binalatofigan. Ho put in commotion the whole province specinlly the toivns of Cal as i.10, Mangaldan, .Dugupan, San Jacinto, IVianc:~oag, Santa Barbara, Malc:,sigui, Bayambang, Pard qui, and the town of his birth. Asintan refused to join the uprising. Alcalde Gamboa and the majority of the religious fled from the province, including~. N8lendez, who was supposed to enjoy great pr0f,tige and influence among the. Pangosinanes who, on this occasion, spurned the advice and supplications of their priests. P. Melendez and other religious of the province availed themselves of their friends and protegees to persuade the rebels to pacify themselves and to seek pardon f'rom Anda, assuring them that certain concessions ~ould be granted, such as the removal of Gamboa as J\.lcalde :Mayor. In effect, a number of principc:lles went to Bacolor Soptem:)er, 1763, and, through the rnE:diation of r. Melendez anrl. his fell ow rnemb ers of the order, obtr 1ined from Andn the pardon thut they requested •••• 0 -301Anda relieved Gamboa of the a lcaldeship of Pangasinan appointing in his place Dn. Jose R~fael de Acebedo, who arrived at Pangasinan, November 5, 1763. The new chief of the province issued an order to the gobernadorcillo of Binalatofigan to demand the delivery of the pie ce.s of artillery that had been taken in the first uprising. Palaris, together with the leaders of that town and those of Bayambang, Calasiao and J.Vlaf.i.galdan, refused to comply with the order, . It was necessnry to use force to compel them to ohey the order. They, on their part, put themselves under arms. They seized in Binalatofigan the chief justice of the province, D. Francisco de Vargas Machuca, and, in the presence of F. Melendez, "whose pleadings they neither respected nor heeded, they treacherously put him to death." Upon hearing of the seiz·ure of Vargas, the Alcalde Mayor rushed with four hundred men for the rebel town, in company with D. Ignacio Barzaola. In Calasj_ao he fou 6 ht a formidable battle with morG than 4,000 rebels. Finding it impossible to overcome the~, he took refuge in the convent of the town. there he wa·s besieged for several days. 'rhe rebellious crowd set fire to the church and convent, and the alcalde and his companion had to take refuge in the steeple of the church, where they remained five days with hardly anything to eat. They were saved only with the arrival of a force commanded by Pedro Bernardel, which forced its way through hostile towns. With the rather delayed arrival of r8enforcements under the Alcalde Mayor of Cagayan, D. Manuel Aria, the critical situation of the loyal troops changed for the better! ThiP- Pangasinan rebelliQn was finally put down (March 1764}. . .. The principal leaders of' the revolt were executed. Palaris was sent to the scaffold in January, 176j. ... 302(b) The Ilocos Revolt The story of this revolt as told by the same Spanish . 1 author is given in the fol 1 owing passages: On the 1st of February, 1762, D. Antonio Zabala y Uria, native of Mexico, took charge of the Alcaldia of Ilocos. The province of Ilocos at the time included what are now La Union and Abra and the two Ilocos provinces. Like many other provinces, it suffered from abuses on the part of Alcaldes mayores, who, with the privilege given them to trade~ monopolized the trade in their respective provinces • . :: Besides this grievance, the people o.f Ilocos hated the tri-. bute, especially the comun, consisting of one real fuerte which every tribute payer was required to pay every year. News of the English invasion and of the outbreak of a revolt in Pangasinan made the province ripe for the great commotion which occurred in this vast region. 1 - Ibid. A contemporary account of the revolt is Relacion deios alzamientos de la ciudad de Vigan, written by Fr. Pedro del Vivar, an Augustinian fripr. Padre Vivar was, at the time of the Ilocos uprising, curate of the town of Batac. Montero y Vidal's account is based chiefly on the Relaci6n of P. Vivar. --nieepisode is also treated by Isabelo de los Heyes in his Historia de Ilocos, (Manila, 1890). 2 - 'rhe privilege to engage in commerce was known as "indulto de comercio." Alcaldes-mayores enjoyed this privilege except those of Tondo, Zamboanga, Cavite, Nueva Ecija, Islas Batanes and {\nt:ique, who, however, received larger emoluments of office. The amount paid for this privilege varied according to the importance of the province as a commercial field, from about 1/6 of the annual salary, as in Zambales to 1/2 of the salary, as in the provtnce of Caraga. The post of Alcalde Mayor was eagerly sought after because of the many opportunities for profit that it offered. -303The petty lawyers (abogadillos) and petty chiefs ( apoderadillos), who a bound in every town, advised their clic,nts at fixed places to take advantage of the inexperience of the new Alcalde to securf2 the substitution of the copitarrns or local chiefs. They obtained what they wanted. Their success encouraged several other towns to make similar demands. 'I'he people of Laoag went, to the extent of taking the law in their own hands. Zabala was :forced to proceed against the-: promoter, Tomas Corcuera, thereby causing di~aff8ction among the latter's followers in that important town. At this moment, there arrived at the capita]. of·Ilocos, returning from Mnnila, a mischievous Indian, named Diego Silan, a native and resident of Vigan. He propagated among the natives those ideas which he lwd learned from the traitor Oren-dain? {in whose house in Manila he stayed for some time J, and from his relatives, particularly Lopez, master of camp, who was one of the promoters of tbe uprising in Pangasinan.3 · 3 -· "Diego Silan, promoter of the uprising, was born December 16, 1730. He was the son of Miguel Silan, native of Pangasinan and of Nicolasa de los Santos, of Vigan, both of whom being of the princ ipalia class. He was ba:pti.sed in the town of Vigan January 7, 1731. His baptismal name was Di0go Baltaz,ar, and his god-fath8r was a principc1l named Tomas de; Endnya. As a lad he served the cura of Vigan, Dr. Cortes y Orriosolo, who sent him down to Manila in a Chinese champan. The cha~pan was wreckiad on the coast of Bolinco, and the infidels of those mountains killed all who were fli-1ved from the sh,ipwr2ck excL:pt Silan whom they kept as a slave. An Augustinian Hocollcct in BolincJo heard of the shipwreck and being anxiom3 to deliver the lad from perdition, ~e made great efforts to ransom him. Silan, now fre0, proceeded to Pangasinan, where he made himself known to his parentn, with whom he remained but, later, he left for Vigan where he learned to read and write. For a tine lrn stayed unemployed at home with his parents. Later, he married a widow, t1n.ria ,Josefa Gabriela, servant of D. Tomas .Millan. He mnintainod himself and his family with the little that his cloric gave him, whom he served as his master, and wit 11 what tw · gn ined carrying -304-- Silang, among other things, preached that the Spaniards no longer ruled in the Philippines, be-cause the E:i:v:lish had taken nossession of IV.ianila; that the tribute should not he paid; thnt, inasmuch as the Spaniards could not protect the IJ.ocano:.3 from the En~lish, it was necessary to oreani½o a council in the province to defend themsel7es fron the enemy; that it was necessary to remove the ,contributions and services which weis;hed on the nativos, and to free themselves from the exactions and oppreosive acts of the Alcaldes; and that, once the principales and the common people were united, they must resist the British, safeguard their own interests and the welfare of the Catholic religion; that in all these undertakings they could count with th9 2ssistance of the Pangasin~nes. In Vigan tho bad seed sown by Silan rapidly germinnted. The Alcalde had Silan arrested, but the Provisor, D. Tomas I.iillan intervened on Silan's behalf and tho latter was r3leased. With impunity, Silan enga 6 ed openly in arousing the people. The principales, animated by their hatred towards the Alcalde, followed him. Various meetings in the rancher::i.as were held. In one of these meetings, the following resolution was approved: letters and messages to all kinds of person. In this service, he came to acquire a largo circle o:f acc:uaintances, and being found a bsolutel:r trust1A1orti.1y, h,:J was nppointed to carry the letters and ·messa:.;es for this province ,;,·1hich came annually on the boat from Spain, beinc sent every year for this purpose to Manila at the timcc tlvJ boat ,.:1as expected. It was in this capacity that ;_1u came to liifc'1nila in 1762, and as the Filipino {the galleon from Nueva Espafia) was delayed, it was necess2ry for hin to tarry there, stayi"fl:?;,,, some time in tl1e hoaso of Orendain whom he used to call mastor, · sometime in the co1LVent of tl1e Agustinian fathers, until the arrival of tho British. After the occupation o.f Lanila, ho came to Pc1.ngasinan and planned with his parents to 'Start an uprising. Having entered into an understanding with the mn.ster of camp, Lopez, a relative of his? rcg&rding the proposed insur :cection, he came to Ilocos. \P. Pedro del Vivar, QE.• _s:!i.t.) -305- 11 That the Alcalde Niayor, D. Antonio Zabala, bo removed nnd Provisor D. Tomas Millan should t'.lke his place;that as chi0f justice one of the four principales of Vi,cun be appointed; that personsl . services bo removsd; that the Bishop be asked to expel the Spaniards and mestizos from the province; that Silan should celect the best men in thG province and set forth to regain from tte British the flags that Spain had lost; and thai whoever opposed these plans so necessary for the tranquility and peace of tho province, the interests of the Crown of Spain on~ the welfare of our sacred Catholic faith, should be r::onsid-ered as a traitor to God and to the King; and thr,t, finally, the neccss.::iry expenses should be taken from the comun, WDich is jr . l +-ne k:r.:>eD"'n2: ~ j_ '-' of• tbo /\leaJ. dC • · ' 11 1+ V , -·~ •C'J • ' 0 0 The principal followers of Silan were: in. Abra, Pedro Beebee; in Laoag and Bacarra, Corcuera; in Paoay, the capitan of the same, Jose Crictobal; in Bar,ac, San Nic:ola.,s, Sarrt:it, anc.i Dingras, a m:111 by the nam0 of Botar~as • . On tho l!+th of December, a crowd of t::.mogu.J.s and principol es unc'.er the leadership o.f Sil an, all armed, appeared before the Alcalde an1 demanded his resi2nation. The Provisor interveced a~d tried to pacif; them, but to no avail. The Bishop, believing that the resignation of the Alcalde would pacify them, urged tho lat~er to give up hie post :i.n favor of the Provis or. Zabala comnJ.i cd dnl i ver5.ng ·to the Provicor ti:ic' canr:3 ( bast on) and ·'~ho f1m<ls of tho Roy3l Treasury. Tho Bishop infor~ad Anda of what h8J taken place, giving h1.ru to und0rstand that it w::ts necer:rrn.rv that a ne',v Llc'.J.lcle 'oe sent ,-, ., as soon as possiole. . 1"!11.-.a 11+·~ "") e l"' re!.., ,.) ' f•cLy, f"' • . r om b einc, f Sc,-,t-'c-·t·:•~ .. l:.J . .J.8 d ClL' CC0 t 1P ., 1 " Bishop tho~ght and expected, de~nnde1 from him the remova.l of the tribu·0c1 c1nd personal survices. Bishop UstC1.riz acceded to it pi-·oviderl. they put off their hostile attitude and return to pe3ce- -------- -306- ful life. In answerf they asked to certify that they were free from any responsibility in the affair regarding the Alcalde; that he deJ.ive:c to them the firearms, which they claimed they needed to fight the British, and,lastly, that he send away D• .Miguel Pinzon and all the Spanish me,stizos, except D. Francisco !'!iorales, D. Manuel Prieto, D. Esteban de los Reyes, and D. Nicolas Pio. The Bishop answered them, reiterating the concessions made and promising to intercede for them with Anda so that they would not be held liable for the removal of the Alcalde. But as regards the banisl1ment of the Spaniards and the deljvery of firearms, the Bishop advised them that the persons in auestion had not committed any fault whatsoevei, and that it was not possible to deprive the new Alcalde of firearms, inasmuch as he was called upon to defend the province. Silang insisted in his demands, whereupon the Bishop, issued an interdict. But t;his move had no effect upon Silang and his followers. The Provis or fortified himself in his housfl; gathered there the firearms, and surrounded himself with his partisans, prepared to defend himself. The rebels set fire to the city. The Bishop and some of the religious left for the towns of the North intending to go to Cagayan •••• The r0bels assaulted the house of the Provisor, and killed three Spaniards, two Indians, nnc. the 111estizo l'-Iiguel Pinson. From the house they reE:ovGd the powder, c~nnon, lantacas, and other weapons to the house of bilan •••• The Bishop issued. a circular urging the natives of Ilocos i:Torte to take up arms against Si1.an. ThosE: of Bc,tac c;J.adly an,swered the call of the prelate, as did those of San Nicolas, while in Laoag itself, principal center of 0il§..Q.;LsrgQ in the North, che Eishop 1 s appeal was favorably received. Corcuera, whose fidelity was undQr suspicion, was at the head of the loyal group. He -307brought about the arrest in Paoay of Botargas and his son, who wore hanfed in Laoag. The Ilocanos of the North mar·ched towards V:5.gc1n. Those of Bacarra, under t h<.:3 comr,1c1.nd of D. Francisco Dominto, went Ahead as far as Cabuyuo not aware that 2,000 followers of Silan were ready to meet them. A c~irmish fo~:owed and thirty of the loyctJ. f orco w:Jro killed. Upon hearir.g of the result of the en..c;a::;0jilcnt, th.e loyalists from the other towns fled panic-stricken, With the capture of the house of the ?rovis~r. and. th_e ~ir0;a:cms, ?:~lan fuund hirr:.se~..f in a P?sJ.tion -co or~ng under lE~, control &ll tnn tm·ms in the southern part of t~e province. He promulgut0d orders reli9v:Ln3 the people from t.he tribute and the personal services, aB well as from all forms of service to the principales and cabezas de b2rangay. . ' a·f'.ine of 100 D8SOS on S 1·1 annex t ir~osea each of the reliJious of Ilocos Nor.t e 1 i1otwi thstanding his avowed. re:Jpect for relj~gion and its mir...isters. To defend hi~self against an expedition from Anda and ap:aj.nst nossible machinations on t]w part of the rel igJ.ous, ~ he i.1ad. all lines of conm·un5.cation by land and by sea closely guarded. Sil.an, now in possf:ssion of rnoney, je~veJ.ry, cottle and commodities of all l:inrfo. and beint warned by Anda that he vrnuld be considGTCC cl, ~:ro.itor s1.1ould 110. not yield to the 1.:1:; 1~er 1 s a1. tl1,:n·i.ty within nine days, decided to offer his services to the Brit,ish. 1 T-· The Br:Ltiah sen~ to Po~gol {p~rt next.to V1can) n tender c.::1.:crying letLcrs anu ::::i:c0.scncs to Sil an. 'I'hey adrni;Li.st ered to him an o:rt:1 cf allegiance to the 1:ciri.g 0f Gre.J.t Bri tuin .:-uH1 arranged for ths delivery of the province of Il0cos. They conf er:ted U'.Jor: htm t h3 title of S:;trFen:.~o mayor and Alcc::;ldeL !'.lEtyor. · Tl11?y also le-f:'t Wit11 him 138 printed blan\: titlec for governo:"E::l Emd su.bordinato officials ••• -308- In his capacity as "Sargento Mayor, Alcalde Mayor, and Captain in the War.for His British Majesty," he issued a circular making it known that he was going to deliver the province to the Britiah, in view of the fact that Simon de Anda was about to send an expedition to overrun thorn with sword and fire, and that he found it necessary to seek the aid of c.ho Enc,:lish who woi).ld orctect thorn in the enjoyment of their freedom from' the tribute and personal services.5 He included in his circular the text of the proclamation in English of Cornish 2nd Draper in which the latter offered English protection to the Indians, proviC:.ed these did not join the enemy, the Spaniards, or give thorn any help whatsoever. The British also promised to ex8mpt the Ilocanot3 from the tribut c nnd to respect the Catholic religion ••• On the 14th of May {1763) Silan wrote to P. Juan Olalla, provincial VicQr and curate of IJJagsingal, informing him that he had an order f:i..,om the governor of :Manila to d<?.live:t:;' the curates of Bacarra, Paoay, B~doc, San Nicolas, Batac and Candon, and that he (Silan) required the curates of the aforementioned towns to present themselves at the Casa Real (that is the name given in the Philippines to the house of provincial chiefs.) The Bishop in a circular of May 18, addressed to all tho religious, protested against the interference of Silan in ecclesiasticc:'tl mat- 5 - Isabelo de J.os Reyes, in Q..12• 9it ~, says in this connection~ "I can not understand how Silan, who was very shrewd, ever made this error ( showing himself to the Ilocanos as a representative of the British, in whoso name he charged them tribute), or how he managed. to heve the Ilocanos accept the domination of tho British 1:vhose rule, as he himself told them on a former occasion, vas very oppressive and whose religion was false. Had he acted in this manner, he would have lost the confid·3nce of the Ilocanos. That is why I am inclined to believe that he was deceiving the English in order to be sure of their aid against the Spaniards, but that he concealed his relations with them from the Ilocanos. Perhaps his real purpose was to drive away the English and the Spaniards from the Philippines when circumstances favored him. 11 · -309- tors and agr1inst unwarranted procoedinss against their persons, and urged them to osseniliJ.e in the converit of Lantay. In comDliance vd"",11 this order, the curates of tho tow~s of the north assembJ. ed &t Ma1rsinR:c1l. F:com tiwre the fJllowers of Silan tran;fer;ed then to Bantay where they rernainoo. in compan:r w it:1 Bishop Ust,u·iz. This peaceful prelate, together with the other reli~icus, Vffote on M.:1y 25 to 3:ilc:m indicat·· ing his lack of jurisctiction OV8r them, and mak. \- • • • l :..i.an:age v1 1ucn, wren th eir • in~ ,nm sec tl,., · 10(; SyJ.r.1tua__ ci.eparture, their pa:··L;.]hiCJners would ,:rnstain. He ·-asked him to leave them free to discharge their reJigious duties, E\r:d "°:;hc\t they in turn, nwouJ.d. 110t _..:i • • • •' l interfer,a v-Ji th l1is !_?;,)Vornrner~t and wo11:.d. estRblish ' . '. 1 r·e.1 d t ,ion;;.1 . ., +-Jne • 'i'n. t'D .rum ~oruia 1or goo d an d se- curity of tbj provinc:c, i; Silan ordor0d the inf5.dels to go to V:L,e:an at oncG and rurnor hac~ it thaJ0 :..t wa~; his pvrposo to kill thra rel igi.ons w:10 wsre shut up in Lant,o.y. A C a D..1.S1: .; . ffi-~SL,.1..ZO C ., _,_ ..: • r ·. ., bl ,·. • -:r·.,1-.,.,_ ,, l V 1-_,o..., . n - "' 1 QTl. t:D.,,l" "' ,:, '1··r up r~c1mec, 0 f· 0 .S ilan due to g:i. ieva:v~ cs :c e c ei vi::;d from -~:r-1.0 tyrant, planned to kill 8:Uar.. Knowing t:b.at, Pe:-:1:co Bec:Je;C, an ol.d f::."icnd of Sil~n and one of his Jic11~0Lants, 1,-, 1 also had iust comDlaints ap·c:,ins"':", him, Vicos made .L L, ~;..-', . ,an accomp 1·ice in . t l11s ' . t l11m proJec·. Beebee .qnri. Vicos ar~r~::r,d ·to c::1r.c,r out their ''Tha reli?;'.:.ot:s +~orethe1" witl1 the B:i.sho-o. sr.en-t, alm":.lst all. tLeL· time pray:i.ng f1:;:cvently for the fucces.s of tr'.e e:01~.erprise," sQys F. Vivar, who was nne o~ thos0 confined in Dantay, and "Vicaa confesseJ and ~ook holy communion c!etermined to kilJ. or r.:i8. ;i plan on +,11r:0; 28th of May.·· ~ Tho Indians, under. the commend of Beebee, slowly app1·0-=1.chec'. the ho11sc o.f SiJan, Th:3-_.r were told that they had "'.Jeen sunmoned to :cccei1n fr.Jrn the Provisor t:1e coJ111.n o.~' tl'e 1n·ovin.-~0. In t110 ~ i:r. ---~-~1 -,-3.-·. t . . . h::, mea.-1liJ.ll,e., \ :I.CO:::; pass .c,l.c ..,flJ. ,n.gn J c.I. .J./ Wr:.._,rO .e rec0ived the ~lcssincs of the J:i.shop. He then procpedeJ to Vigan, proviJed himself wjth a blunc,erbuss ( t:tabuco), which he cone Jaled undei'· his coat, and th.cn marc-hud towc1.rds the house ot Silcw. r:, ·'· i ""1 • ..1- - .,.,,. 1 ,, ·- 11t::l- 1. • -310~ Beebee arrived at the house of Silan with his account book, sayin;; that he had como to settle once and for all ·:.:.he question of the comun. Silan asked him, "ihi hav~ so many people coma?" Beebee replied that he hc.:td sur:1moned only a few, but, on finding out that he was coffii~g for the coruun, the people came in great numbE;rs j c.mxLrns to receive it and to see the:.r- Alcalde Mr.yor·. Said Silan, 1 In that case beat the drum and firo the cannon, and let the peoplo gather here, ,:.md we ,1ill put an end to this Bishop, Provisor and fria~s, if the~ do not give us tl·1e .£Ol;l1n.' SjJ_ang entered his room and Beebee prevented the guards from giving the expected signal. Just 11 then, Vicos reached the house, mounted ;_:._ lancsi2e or bamboo bench f'ror:i which he could ov8rlook the sala, just at the momen~ that Silan was comir~ out from his room. Vices greeted him and Silan returned the greetings. The latter then turned a:i;ound to re-enter the room, Vi ;os at once took out "t,he blunderbuss, discl1ar3;ed 211 i~s contents and Silan feel dead. 1 Vi cos wets :i.~eccivec~ with joy in Bantay. The religious sc:-rne:: a Te De1im aft,_n~ which they returned to their respective curacies. The Bishop in a procla~1tion g-ra.nteu pardon to all c=ind renewed his pledge to g:"ant to the people exemption from the tribute ~nd person~l services. But th3 rebels attempted to renew the uprising, choosin.e: µS Sila.L' s successor, an unclo of his, Nicolas Carino, while the wife of 3:Uan did not cease to crouso the peonlG to aven~e the death of her husbanc~.' hoJ.dirrg meetings ·with the assistants and partisans of S5.1.:m. The result was that the uprising broke out ane;w. Pimentel, Beebee and Reyes wore attacked in 3anta and forced to flea. Carifio s0nt agents and l8tters to all partisans of Silun, and several towns placed themselves under his orders. The religious of !locos Norte were able to arouse their parishioners to proceed aga~nst the rebels of Vigan and their followers in Pnngasinan, and 6,000 of them ii.ssembled for this purpose. In Cnbugao they defeated the rebels and on the 11th of July entered Vig an in triumph. Carifro and the c~1ief l eader.s ,of the UP,rising fled. A portio1:; of the Ilocanos from the No~th proceeded tu the bouth and made themselves ma.sters of the situation there. But tl18 Provisor foolishly aJ.loWGd the more prominent fieures of the uprising to escape to Abra instead pf ordering th3 occ~pation of this part of the province. On the 20th of :3 ertE)mber D. Manuel Ignacio de Arza y Urrutia &rrivod at Vigan with 100 men. He at once proc 00ded to P.bra, · tho meeting pJ.oce of the principal leaders qf the reb6llion. Those were 3u:cprised by Jl.rz.1 1 s uneY.pectr-;d asf31..ni1t, ond wore driven to th8 terrjtory of the infidels where they wore pursued ~nd captured. Arza brou3ht them to Vig an and had S Llnn' s wife, Sila:i 1 ::o cou:Jin, 3etas-;,~5.etn Zn~aya, e.nd Hj_guel li'lores, of 'I'ayuin (A bra j, hanged. 0ver 90 in0ro rebels were executed and several others were punished. (c) Uprising in Other Provinces. In Cagayan R revolt broke out as soon as it ,,-,as learned that the 13:ritish tad ccpt·J.rod Jvic:.miln. The timauas of Ilagan dPcla:;:·ed theL·.:::e~_vos indE-;pondent and free from the tribute, Februa~y 2, 1763. They comrritted acts 0f violence s:i.E1iLr.' to t}.10rrn committed by the rebels of PEmg.:rn::_nc=;_n ;_,nc: I:::..ocos. 'l'he revolt extended to Cabagan. ers were Dabo and LTuan Narayac. .. The lead- It was at this monen-s that the vt11iant D. Manuel Arza, who had ;JPE:D appoL1tod by Ar"d~ Jieutenant general and vi:3:i.tor of th1i~ prov:h1ce and of +-1-, .... ·JC'.' Tl OvO,., ,c.,n d IJ,an.,_,_,c:;_,_Lc,.l, ~1"11-:.1· T'Jd , "ue plOVlnCLiJ O ...p ~ .~ BII.1.\:('., 1" 1 h y ~tl0 ,_ • • 1i1t11 nis own f' orcG, str0Lgt~0Lea aa'd 1~1on of loy2l troops, he succeedec' in f'.Ll.bd ,-,__::_ng tI1e re-be 1 s, ma k" . .. ' t' . l .~.V(i)S ~J:.n~; t h.e ring _.·1__ Ea d eri...:; p,17 vn·..:;n -:.tteH' ('"I j,T • 1 • Ct .-, Cf''""l 1 1'"'1'i l • -312- for their disloyalty. Later, h~ left for Vigan, where he imposed, as we have seen, similar l'.Junishrnent on the rebels of that region. In La LagunQ and BatangRs, there were also registered criminal nets, thefts and serious attempts on thG persons of Spaniards, friars and the Indians themselves. A few bc:n.ds of bo.ndits infested the roads. 'l'he tr1ct18GS o.lceldP, of La Laguna tried to enforce the orciers of the Archbishop which cornL::mdcd that the British sliould be left unmolested in their journey through that province. Ho punished the gobernadorcillo of Pagsanjan for disobeying such absurd mandate, and the latter in veangeance killed him. In the provinces of Tonda and Cavi~e, althou_gh more .submissi vc to authority, robberies, assassinations and other acts of violence were committed. , There were also slight disturbancos in Ge.marines, Samar, Zo.rnboa11f:a and Panay. In the latter province the reli:i;ious ho.d to assembJ.e nnd to depose the alcalde mayor, Quintanilla, who was e. partisan of the Jritish. P. Barte, took his place. course. The curate of Aclan, Anda approved this Cebu also suffered from disturbance of public order caused by the mourrt:=l.ineerEi. Alcc1ldo Labayan with the help of the Agustinian fathers, succeedud in suppressing the movement and hanged the leaders of the revolt. -313- CHAPTER ECCLESIASTICAL 1. FIVE AFFAIRS, 1767-1776 The Question of the Curacies Duricg th8 Timos of Archbishop Sta. Justa and Governor Anda. In the following passages, Montero y Vidal tolls of the incidents which arose during this period out of the ques- . J. . ' curacies. . l t ion o·. f t·ne Ph. . 1.1pp1ne On July 22, 1767, the new archbishop, B,.;t:dl:io s,. t· a J,Uva '-''t ,r RUIJ.LD, _,. , .. ·,, t·l)O k po,,,.. ..,,,8,::,,_,J_on -"'"'. · · O.!. 1 San.eh 0 o.e 1dJ:l. .I the see of Manila, and immediately ·undertook to ::mbj ect the rcgult.1.r curas to his d:.i.occ?.Si.HI vis:i.tation, thus revivinc the Cama8ho controversy of 1697J, 700 with tl:rn relirious orders; but Santn Ja.sta had the support of th9 civil aut:1ority, which. had orders to enforce the royal rights of patronagn:2 I .J:> - -----J. - B. &; .a.., voJ.. 50, pp. 29-h3, beinc: a stmrr: ary of the account by Montero Y" V:~dal. Anda bec::uncJ governor and captain general of the Philippines for the second time during the years 1770-1776. · 1 2 - Right of patronage ( ius J22,tr·.or..sJt11p) ·-- a. determinate sum o.f ri~hts a:1d obligations en,.:;a:i.led upon u definite person, especially in connection with the as.sj_;cz.:rn'1ent 3.nd administration of a b orwfic e; not in vi:rtue of his hiernrcld.ca1 position, but by the legally regulated. grant of the Church, out of gr2titudE towards the bencf3ctor. R.ights involved: (1) right of presrmtation. -- the rno.:::t important privilege -- In case of a vacancy in the bonefico, the patron may propose to the ecclesiastical superiors E1mpowered with the rj_ght of a collation, the name of a suitabl E) person (persona idonea). -314"The covernor of the islands, on his side, communicated to the provincials of the relic;ious orders rigorous commands that they must cmbmit to the royal right ,s of patronnge: that vd.thin a short timeJ_imit they should present their list1.:; of three no.mes each (sus ternas) for appointments to all the curacies; c:1.d that in future the:r might not remove any religious from his post without informing the viceregal patron of the causes, whether public or privnte, :for such act:i.on, 11 3 'I1lie Dominican provin.ce, in a provincial council of August 5, 1767, yielded to the archbishop 1 s claims, and during the following year ho visited oll the parishes administered by them; but some individuals refused to obey the council~ The other orders obstinately resisted the ----·--' (2} honorary rights: precedence in procession, sitting in churcn, prayers nnd intorcessions, etc. Obligations: (1) C'J.r'G berir.Jfj_cici - pr.eserve unimpnired status of bei.-isi'ic o-:-{Satholic E:-1c::J.~}00·-::d:i.al, 3 - As Viceregal Patron the Governor au.1 ~aptain-General of the Philippines possessed these rights: (1) Decide questions relating to patronage, { 2) To be' informed of all resignatiuns or vDcc:mcies in prebonds, curacies and benefices, (3) Pre~ent ~uitable individuals for appointment to oonefJ.ces. (4) Admird.ster oaths from Bishops-olect to recognize the ri;d1t s and r 2 --:c.,1 ias of roval patronage. (Book I, TitJ_e VT). . (5) Intervene + in . all affairs of. ths spirituel govt, , . . ernmfalu, i.1 repreaentat J_on ol ·-,r.e :::Lng, J.n accordance with the laws. (6) To aak, jo:i.ntly v:ith the Audim1ci2., the prelates to visit tneir dioces~s end to be in the cou~icils. ~~aw 14'?, title XV, Bo?k. II). (7) Intervene ~n any c1s~uss1on between ruligious, using, in t 11u first instance, his good offices, a~d if this is not sufficient, toe~-· pJ.0y al]_ the foeans permitted by law, until order i::, reestc:~blisb.ed. · {Law 50, title III, Book III). Escosura, i\fon1orin So-ore [_:i}j.pin,1.s, PJ:)_• 55-56, r"'I -315- episcopal visitation, declaring that they would abandon their c~racies if it were enforced. Ttereupon, the archbishop appointed secular priests to the vacant cur3cies, including those of the Farians, Binondo, and Bataan, which were in charge of -r,he Dominicans. As the number of Spanish priests was so small, the archbishop made up the deficiency by ordaining natives from the semin~ries; but this rneasurs caused great resentment among trie regulars and their supporters, and 8ta. Justa hi:r1self was disappointed in its effei::ts, as the nat~ve clergy were generally so unfit for the office of priest in both education ::rnd mo,'."'oL.:,. Complaints to the king were m&de by both the religious orders and tnB archbishop, filled. with mutual accusations and recriminations; and R8on withdrew his sup~ port frorn the latter, ceasi~g ~o press the clai0s of the royal patronage -- in:'luenced thereto, according to Montero y Videl, by the j_n-t-:..~igues of the Jesuits, who were enemies to Sta. Justa~ ..• "The religious c or porati ons, not:,wi thstandir;g the support which they generally 18nt to AndJ during the v,;ar with the English, regarded with d :'..s pl8EJ.sure his appointment as governor of Filipinas. Thc1t st:i:·j c t magic:trate, obeying tte dictates o.f his conscierice ( which some persons att:r;:ibut e, tut w:l tbo 11t sufficient grounds, to feelings of personal rev0r.ge), had addressed -to the king on April 12, 176d, a::1 expos5.tion which treated of '~he disorders which exist in Filipina s, and which ought to be corrected.. 1 In -:.his . h e points . . . cJ b use:3 among t'ne aocur.1ent ..• out most s,3r::..ou3 friars; in the University, which was in tlrnir charge; among the Jesuits; among the ChiDes9, r,r ot8c ted by the friars, who preferred them before th3 Spaninrds, drivir:g away cind expelling the latter from the:i.r villages; and he censures certa:i.n frr:mds and practices in the publfo cS16ministration in spec::.fied branches of the civil service. The severi·:::.v with which Anda laid bare those abuses drew upon hi; the hatred of the friars. In this dot,;:ume nt he de1:1a r:.deJ o r,3medy for the dis orders which he d::mounc eel$ pointing out the method by ·which this might be effected, and declared tl-at 'for the radical correct:::.on of these evils it is indisoensable to drEd,11J UD and ::.ntroduce here a form of procedure whi8h is cJ.eer, and capable of securing the jm,t system wh::.ch correspor. .ds there-to, conferring upon the governor all the powers ne- -316- ccssary for carrying it into exec~tion, by these msasures which prudence and the actual condition of affairs shall dictate to him.' He addsd: 'The choice of a zealous governor will materially contrioir~e to laying the foundc:,tions of th&t great vrnrk; but it is nsc,3ssbry t,o re·ward him and give him authority, so th2t he can work 00 ad7ar:.tage, and without the hindrances v./hich ba1Te of·:,~m> by rneanE, of secret c ornrn.unica tions, c umd ng and disloyal mant=.;uVers, and other ~alicious proceed~ngs, frustrated the best 7 ~r~ 77 ~nd .,U m-st c~re·In'l f'o-rn··pd D ' '11},-is e-rne;,~i·•·1·on C.t. - , ......... L y~_-LC'.-~0• J..1.l..!.r...,;:_.1'-'v by Anda was ce:>:'tainly taken in00 account, for in th2 trcyal private: inetructions wl:ich v;ers giv9n to him when he was appointed governor o: F il:;iina 3 vJE) see that he was ord~red ta put an end to spGcified ebuseE and disorders, the klng using the s~me tGr~s which Anda had employed in c.escribing those Eovils." ~ -l.,.,J._~, "The Arcl1bishop Santa J;.ista, a mo.n of unpa:"alleled firmness and energetic character, from th2 first mo. , d 'h +-' men~+ ~ ssaL.8 ·. ·c .e. new gov':::1:T?r o~f' =·~·. J:I LL:.p1na 0 on ._,ne question o: the d.1.O8'2San vi::::;.tGt::.on, to wn:'.Ch t;-1e friars cont inu9d their oppos it ::.on, and dJmc:,nci.ed 11.is 1·ncke ~+ 9P?0ct1,cl d~nr.. J Tuj~Q SUDp nrt l.!1 Order +o u c. .,.t.r.;.c. _ • .iJ._.1v.c , re 6 arcied obedLmce to the :aw3 Em a ru.l·a of co::1dL.ct, and who brought ord2rs fror.1 thr:; com··::; to 3•_1bject the to ·th:~ royal pa"-V....... or:~,,.r., adrl·<"'r,5c,.:::,d· ,,,., 8"p1i·r "-'gu'..,rs ,...,,.,, -LO. .. -OE.)_.,,, L...·,...,, ct.L.:. ci1j communication to the t,ureriors of all ":;hE: r8J.igious institutes, requirL.11: their ob<"~C:ienci.:; to tlie mandate of t~!iJ sovereign, end assign::.ng a dcfi?1ite term, w:1.ich could not be prolonged, .for the pr3s0ntation of their l5-sts of apDoin-;:; '3ef', in ordu:r that, the curacies migh-t:. be fi::1.:::.ed in th::s ma'1ncr. i-i.11 -i::.he O'"'enl,r rE0 fu·::,er' _,..1v..., T--iel,;J r..t-:,,i·:er·CP. C rdt,r~ 0~ .re·.g·,7qrc. c. \,.., 1.-' u J· _._11 '--' ·...;\. _,_ _. _, ;1-~ a-+', D ·--; .·.~·,rQ .,,1,, ·· O Of +hi·s s o r t ' exc~p., ... n~ ..,ne OuL_r1J.,u ,,_, - - \1.1.0~. l1lOY'8 circumspect, and endeavo~ing to avoi~ the d2ng1re whic t they f or,::;saw in resistanc s, ag::·<°:ed to s1.1".Jmi t to this command -- altho:.12."h manv of trs DE:ri.:s'1 priests of the crd3r soon-'were ;i so::iecient to this decision of their 3upe rior s. TT .L - _ ...1.. .__ , __,, ..:~-'- __ .:..1 .11,;,::! _, "-" ..1.. ..A. .. _ '-J" v1. ... .1 ... -..:~ _ _.,\..l ·. .1i... .J... -· ~ V The archbiehop convlff:ed a prov~.nc ial council at Mc:nila, which held sL:: sessions dL,rinr; the period May 19-Novembr-;r 24, J.771; variol;.s matters of eccler-a7, . C, °drn-i.c.n.,_s ; ·~=a+-i · .- "'h·,r,·,~.-. '-::,f sl· astJ' .. .-., ucn Coffi~ we. OJ..,:,; ;.,...+..,, tl, .. e cn.i.E· of -which wc1s 'chE: dioces:.m visit. In th;:; fifth sesion, the subjection of ~he p,91·ish p:riescs to the u ,.. -317- diocesan vit:dtntion and the roya 1 patrona,::;e was ordained; and at the final one it was ordered that the decreG of the council should im:nediatoJ.y be prorr:ulgated, declaring that those of the council o.f Jv:exico ( vJ'hic h Urban \'III had ordered to :Je obse1°vcd in Filipinas) . . ,ure not n~Yvv .binding:. In trK, first session the bishop oi Nu~v& C8ccres, Fr3y Antonio de Luna ( a Franc i accn) , became inv o~~-" ed 5 n disputes ove"!:' the c.1 ppoint1r,ent of . s e;,cre·c.c.11'j_e s, 2 nd was expelled fron the asseJ1b:_y; he ther, ret:l.rcd to his c~iocese, and during tha 0ntire: p2riod of the council oppos8d its proceedin.gs, with pro·cE:sts, leg:Jl form,.:.liti,2s, and official edicts. Bishop Ezpele~a of Cebu died soon af::.r'3r th8 opening o:'.: the c ounc 5.:::., and the goverrnnent of th s dioc: ese devolved L-:.pon. Lun"l, but, it eeer-:i.s, not its ref:'esentati on in th 3 c ou.:1c:.l. A secretary of t h&t body, Fatter ,J' ea qc1.in L"agg.ia, wc:s se·nt to Mao.rid ae its agent and· bearnr of its despatches; but the king refuc-ed to acc3pt his crJdcntials, and ordarEd him to go to his convent at Zcragoza, forbidding him to rsturn to Fil5.pinas. (ToW3rd the er;.d of this council, ':-he arcl:bisnop, in concert with his suffragans, drew up a tariff for the parochial fe2s tc 0,3 collected by the cu:c1s.) The relj_gious orde:. s ,finally sec1.1.:."ecl, through j_nfluer:.ce at the court, th0 r2voc,'3t ion of the orc.e!" p;i ven to Anda in regard to the regular curas, 1:rhish had resulted in many of them being r'.Jmove:i fro:n the. I:1.dian vill.ages and replaced ty native pri2sts; hut no ch-::inge was m3.de in r0g2rd to t11e dioc:esan v:Lsitation. 1 'I'hP b 1· q 110Y) of' lTu(' v·a 1..c..t,:-;v-., s··c err ··.ri..... c., r: "'<'r·· v· "Vii" c..-:,-·1,..., ~0 1·: c. 1 G·-,'rc.; J £' c.., -1.., claimed tbis rie:tt, aLd c0r.ven0d a dicces,.ir1 cc;_p1cj.l in 1773; tr.e on2.y res1:tl.t "\'l~c,. -'::.o ar?u~E; 1 1:ot. c ?r.1troversy bctw3ec Garcia and th~ Dorrc1n1cans,tc w~ich order h,:; belonr-0ci. ':'bat order a::.sCl hc:.d a c_j sp·1'..:.f:; wit:.h th~-3 erchoishop ovsr his ,:itterrcDc -cc vj_:,:;j,t +:.he beaterj_6 of Santa C.::italL1a; but in· i7?9 t~rn ki:1g decide<i that this institution sl1ould c;c:irtinue to erijoy its exemption from visita~ion. 1 i,.J t..,; .J. ... ~ _ .1. CA., ... "By royal decree of November 9, 177h, it was ordered that t 11e curacies hs 1d by tne regul~rs should be se8u::..arizGd as fc.st as th:=;:;r bec.:ime vacm1t. Anda sus:pended the 2xecuti_un of this c-o:r2 nc1nd, and wrote to the cocrt, spE;:::i:+'ying the 3V:ls which uould ensue from th2 secul2riza~j_cn of the curacies which the ·archbishop clesirt::d; r:ind i".1 cons ec,uencr~ of t hj_s 1 -318- and of the urgent appeals of the Franciscans, Augustini.:ms, ~rnd R,2coll2cts, the king ordered by a dc~cree of D·2ce:mb,2r 11, 1776, that what hc1d been decided on this point:. i.n the decre;:c.! of Nov'"mber 9, 1774, should not be put into exocution and that aff~i::--s should b8 rest~rod to their former status ond conditon, and th8ir curacies to th0 religious; that the regulations fo:' his royal potrri::.Eige anc the 2cr::l.-::?s i:3Stic a 1 visitation shoulc. b 2 obser~1sc., '.)ut t:hat the latter might be made by the: bishops in pc:; rsor, or by rel~gi6us of th~ same ord~r as tho~e wh? sho~l~ serve 1.n the curacies, and without co.dccting visitation feGs. rl'he ki1;.g 1lso directed in t·i'lc, S:li.d decree the: t efforts s}:ould be m,:1de, ~JY a 11 :r,os 3i ble means and methods, to form a large body of competent clerics, in order that, c0nformably to the royal dscree of June 23, 1757, these might be installed in the vacant curacies, thus gradually 8stablishing the secularization that had bet:n decreed. ' 1 The Do~inic3n historians, Ferrando and Fonsec3 in the following passages give, fro~ their Histor::.a d,o los PF. Dominicos, the Dominican viewpoint on the events of 1767-1776: 1 Whon Raon insi~tcd on" en:o~cing t~le royal r~gh~s of potr~n2ge, t~~ orders al~ r~~istei him, re~~a~ing the &rgumcnts 'drnch tLey h&Ci J...L.1..eged to A:2r1rdi::1 ::.n the :i..ike crse. Th-2 Lomi:nicans dsclnrcd that they could no.+:, obey the gcvsrn0r I s commands urn::,5.l th~y could recf~ive orders from theL.~ c:upo!':.ors in Eu:~ope; Raon refused to wai~, and the proviTiciel d0clared th3t his cur3s would rather surrende~ their ministries, '.Jut would. continu2 to serve therei:'1 until the rov,:;r·ror, as vice-patron, should cornrn2nd that 'chese be surrendered to other cures. "This was sufficient to make the archbishop hasten to deliver to the s8cular cL~rgy, first the ministries of thG Parian and Binoncio, and a ±'terw'.:lrds those of t :ie province of Ba- 1 - B. & R., vol. 50, p. 30 :f. -319- taan, notwithstanding that he could have no ea use for complaint a,ri;:::ins t o'-.lr relir_;ious, who without resistance or opposition had accepted his diocesan visit, as he himself confessed in latters to tha king and tne supreme pontiff. He f0u.r..d a pretext for proceeding to the so~ulariz,?tion of t½c3 curacies in Bnta'1n, in the b:mishme:r.t of the Jf~suit.s, whose expulsion from the isJB~ds occurred at the samJ time 2.s thu ev0nts w:iich 1m ars rel,:::-t.5_rw. it "As the ministries in the isL:md o.: Negros w2ro le.ft vacant in consequence of th~ expulsi6n of thb Jesuits, thp. go v~r!1or. a 1dresSE:!d hims el:: to our provir~c in 1, as~-cing ror rtin:..st::Ts to :.)Ccupy those vaca~t posts. The latter excused himself from this, on ~ccount of the lack of rei_igious; and the archbi2hop t1ads this a pretext for inf crming and counseling th,J gov,3rncr that, since the Dominicans ha1 offered their resignation of the doctrin&s in tte :province of Butaan, on account of the 1; ont ro-;ersy over the ri 6 ht of p1:::tror..age, the religious who were ministering in that d.i.strict could be sent to the island of NeEros. He mffered to pre>vide secular priests :_n th::::dr place, and availed himself of thie oppor~unity to des~oil our religious of the curacies or minj_strics of Batac:m. In effect, this was done; and our religious were coLlpelled to abandon to the seculars this province of the archbisho:pric, in order to go to J.sarn a ne1r: dialect a~d minister to straLge peoples in the island of Negros." "The bisl-iop of C ebu had no secular pries~s capable of rep1acing the Jesuits (as deserving as persecuted.) , who -,vere administering the island of N~gros and the province cf Iloilo, ••. coLeequently, 0•1r reli[io·is bega!i to mit~is-':,er in the v:. :;_J_a~ss of r .102.•1 o, r,.J_marc:s, hanc.ur2:-i&o, aLd 110-og, 'ft ~ • • ::...n t h a island of Fanay; and those of Ilog, Cabansalan, Jimamaylan, and Guilgon2n, in that of Negros. Witt great repugnance t:1e provine, 2 took charg2 e,f o.n admirdstration of whic n the tleeuit fat!'lers had been des>Joi.led in so um:-orthJ a manrcer; and not onJ_y :Jn this- acco·.1nt but on ttat of the grec.1-t. di.ffj_cult iGs '.ivh::.c h a2ose from tl1is sep&r~tion of rrovirices <:1Ld v~.11ag'JS, i'1 the regular vi 2 iting of them anc. i:.1 j_nt8rcoc.rso and the supply of provisions, our fath~rs &bandoned those ministries at the end of some years; and in the meantime the bishop of Cebu undertook to transfer their adn1inistrntion to the secular priests. Thus it ,Mas that by the year 1776 our religious had departed from all those villages." tT • ·11[ ' • - -320- 2. The Expulsion of the Jesuits ThG reign of Charles J\II was marked by the ascendancy in the government of Spain of men strongly imbued with the spirit and tendencies of the Age of Reason. In common with the French philosophers, they wer2 :infrienclly c1nd hostile to the Catholic Church. I+:, vras tr.eir purpose a.nd cesire to des- troy the power ar.d influence of the Chucr~h in the political and cultural life of Spain. At thE~ir adv:i.ce, Charles III adopted and put into effect a strong repressive policy against the Order o: the SociGty of Jesus .. For the Jesuits had distinguished themselves for their militant and uncomprorni sing attitude in matters affecting the funde.mentel rights .:mcl pr8rogatives of the Catholic Crwrch. C:narles III \ and his odvisers felt that it was necessc::ry and imperative to banish the Jesuits from Spain and Spain's colonies to enable th8n to put into effect their pla~s of reform. cordingly, on Febr'...l.ary 27, Ac~ 1767, Charles III, :.i.n t~1e Heal Decret2__9_~~;jecU<~ ion, ordered the expulsion of the members of tLe SociBty of LT E:sus from Spa in and from a J_l of Spain I s dominions in the Indies. Charles III I s roy1l ciecrr~e read in pert as follows: P.av~_ng accepted th2 opi::-i.ion of t r..e raen~bers of my Royal Council in Extraordinary, whj_ch met on the 29th of lc1st ,Junuary for consu~.tatiori concEirning past occurrences and concerning matters which persons -321- of the highest character have reported to me; moved by very grave causes rel3tive to the obligation under which I find myself placed of maintaining my people in subordination, tranquility, and justice, and other urgent, just, and necossary reasons, which I reserve in my royal mind; making use of the supreme economical authority, which thu Almighty has placed in my hands for the 1>rotection of my va.ss:1::..s, and the respect of my crown; I have ordered that the Jesuits be expeLLcc', f:corn alJ. my dun,inions of Spa:Ln, the Indies, , tlf0. Phi~. ippine Islands, end other a o.j ac ent regions, priests as v-J\il'll as. coadjutor;::: or lay-,Jrot hers, who may have made the first profession, a:,1c.~ the novices, who may ·v-Ji,1h to f ollov-1 them; and that 211 ::;he proportieo of the Society in my dominions be to~en; and for th1;1 uniform execution of thL.1 decrnc: throughout these dominions I give you full Gnd o~clusive ~uthority; and that you may form the necessary instructions and orders, according to your best judEment, and v1hat you may think the most effective, expsditious, and peaceful method for carrying out these instruments and orders. And I 1,.vish that not on1:' thf~ magistrates and superior tribunals of thes0 kinsdoms may execute your n~ndates punctu2lly, but th2t the same understanding may b (3 ent eri~d.ned cons crrdng those which you may direct to the viceroys, pre:Jiclents, ai.1diencias, gover,·nors, corregidoras, alc&ldos rnayoi'es, and o.ny other matistrc1tes of those kingdoms 2nd provinces; and that iL response to their respective requests, all troops, militia or civilian, shall renrler the necessary assistance, without any delay or evasion, under pain of the delinquent's falling under my royni indignation; and I charge the provin~ials, presidents, rectors, and othcir superior.s of ·;:,~1e Society of Jesus to ac(~ept these i)rovisi0ns punct 11aJly and in carrying them out the Jesuits shall ~c tr8:J.t(~d with rt"'"t r:i:J'" 'd r,tt erh,J_on, ,_ • I- . . .,"··w ,,·,>~,,,.,.!Stth 8 i::;rea ,~,:, Tvf:,c,r , ~.t 110D8.,t.,., c,.,.lC cto,:i.,. ance, so thut in eveJ7 respect ths action t.::.ken r,1ay be in conformity witl1 my sovereizn int E::rt i01lf,. You ,.,v•J l.· 11 1,8 l,·i n • " d f·' • .l 1 1·!.C n+" ' E;p ,.I., h-l.l.::;~ ..,_n ,:lllil . 0 .•""' .;.L t Cl e •. 8 CL, -'-I'.] U. .. f' l.~.L as I yery confidently oxpect from yo11r ~e.J::., a cti-· vity, end love of my royal service; ::uF1 to tbis 011d c:, 7 .._ 1 you will give the necessary orders and instructions, ac compnnying them with co pies of my .coyal decree, which being signed b-y you shall bEJ given the same faith and crf;dit. cJ. s tho o:."ig inal. -322- On Mnrch 31, 1767,. Charles III informed the Pope, at thnt time Pope Clement XIII, of tho nction he had taken again.st the Jesuits. 1 follows: The king's letter to the Pope read as Most Holy Father, Your holiness is well av·Jare th.Jt the fir::;t duty of a soverei8n is to watch over the peace and presor~ vation of his stato, and to provide for the good government and intern,::i.l trc.nguil ity of his fJubj ects. In compliance -.,1 ith th1s principle, I huve b eon U:tJ.der the imp(,rious necessit:,r of resol v5-ng u.1)on tho irn:;wdiate expulsion of all the Jesuits 1Nho w2r8 estc'..J.blL3hed in my kingdoms and dominions, and to send them to tho state of the c hurc:-i, undl':ir the immediate, wise, :n1d holy direction of your 1:1ost holy bocmtitude, most worthy father and 111.-Jster of aJ.l the faithful. I should falJ. under the obliquy of throwin,~; n. heavy char1?:e upon the apostolic privy COUTiCil, by ob1:i_ging it to exhaust its trec.t::;uros j_n t hu sU:'.)lJOrt.inr..; of thoo(:) poor J c.su:Lts who happer. to tave been born my· vassals, had I no~ made previous provision, as I hRve, for the payment to each iRdividual of a sum sufficio~ to maintain him for life. J On such understanding, I pray yodr holiness to view this my determination simply D.s a1i indispcns::ible step of political economy, tr:drnn on1y after ifl,Tture exctrninnt ion, and the mor3t profound reflection. Doing WG the justice to believe {a;J I prey you will), your holinGsr,; wiJ.J as;·mred:i.y g:r.a.nt. you:c holy apostolic benediction on this me3sure, os well us on all my actions, which have for their object, J.n the same wc1y, tho promotion of the honor and glory of· God, (Signed) YO IGL REY 1 - J. P. and '\'J. P. Robert.son, 1.Q:t:t~r,:"3-f_rg__m Par:P-.PT.µ (1838), II, 81-32. Quoted by G:Lc:ven, R~adin.i:~Q..JJ.l.Jiif[QD.JllQ. Arnericnn Historv. -323- Pope Clement XIII was deeply gri8ved by the action taken against the Jesuits by Charles III. In a brief but rneaninc;ful letter which he wrote to Cha.rles III, the Pope made known how hG felt towards ~he Society of Jesus. The text of the Pope's letter ic as follows: 2 "Is it the Catholic Ch2rJ.es III, whom we so much love, thDt is to f :iJ.l to the brim the cup of our.bitter afflici~ions; to ovr;rWhG1m our untw.ppy old a1:,e witr1 grief o.nd tears j and fin,r:tlly to precipitato us into tlrn to;nb? Vfo say i.t in the pr8sonce of God and man, that the body, the institution, the spirit of the Society of Jesus, is absolutely innocent; and not only innocent, but that it . pious, . . is . use f u1-, , ' ' 1 y; o.n d c:, ]--~ 1 ·,,'-lns . is it J.. t., 1.s rlo whether considered with reference to its laws, to its maxims, or to its objec-i:;s. Those v1ho ho.ve a.ttempted to detract from it,s merit.s., h[(VC only called down upon their J.ie:3 c.nd contra,ticti0r1s the cont3rnpt and detestation of' ell _good and imixtrtial men. 11 Following the expulsion of the Jesuits, the Bourbon rulers of' Europe too}:: steps to have the Soci.oty sup})resr.ed altogether, Charles III sent c1 special delerate to t,ho Vatican to work for the Society's suppress5.on. Acting under strong pressure from the Bourbon Kinss of Spain, Fr3nc0, Portugal, Sicily and Parma, PoprJ Clement XIV i:::;sued o. cl e- cree of suppression in 1773. At thG tim8 of the suppression, Rev. Father Lorenzo r; N - Tb; ., .:=;_...::Q• .. 324Ricci was the General of the Society of Jesus. On Novem- ber 19, 1775, in Saint Angelo, Rome, vJhere hG v.1as at that tirne staying, a virtual prisoner, Fn'\;,hGr HiccJ made a brief s·co.tement touching on the supprc-s::d.on of the Society. The statement read as followc: 3 In the presence of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament WLo wi::'d. soon pass jud::i;rnent on in I ckclare that I he1vo not don8 anything +..:.o justify the sup1, ) , pression of t~e Society. I know this to be a fact being fully informed of the aff~irs of the Society as ~uperior of the SE\me. But, as God alone knows, I caL not be responsible for everything. For this reason, with my last ruoment fast approaching, I declare that I am not in the least diJ~urbed about w11at has happened. I l0c1vc everything in the hands of God. I p3rdon all, from the bottom of my haart, and I aak God for all manner of blessings for every one. Lastly, I declare that all thnt I have stated has been made out of regard for the SociGty and for the Faith. 3 - Archive General de Simancas. Rubio, op. c it., vol. 5, p. - ~ - - - Quot cld in ~T • 0 • -325- CHAPTER SIX GOVERNOR BASCO'S AffMINISTRATION, 1778-1787 1. Basco's Plans and Policies Following th~ death of Anda in 1776, Pedro Sarrio'became governor of the Ph:LJ..ippines (J.776-1778)., succeeded in 1778 by Jose de Basco y Vargas. Sarria was In the fol- lowing passages, Montero y Vid.&l tells of Basco' s plans . . 1 an d po 1 icies, In July, 1778, the new proprietary governor an"j_ved at Manilo.; this VJRS Jose de Basco y Vargas, an officer in the ,Sp2nLsh royaJ. navy. 'rhe off:i.cials of the 11.ucl.iencia forth.-vith sent a remonstrance to the court, against their being subordinated to a man wb.ose rank 11 gavo him only the :r.i::_:ht to be addr0ssed as 'you' while ench one of the rnar;istr::.tes (of the Audiencia) enjoyed the title' of i 1Lordsh5.p,'" and they asked for the revocation of Basco' s appoint• ment; but of course this was rei'used, and they vrnre rebuked for their officiousness. As u rcsu1 t, the auditors opposed all that Basco attempted, and even conspired to seize his p0rson and put Sarria in hi\'3 place, That officer, however, rE-:fusecl to join them, and informed the governor of the scheme; in consequence, Basco arrested the recalcitra11t auditors and other persons connected with their plans (including Cencelly), and sent them all to Spain. Now free from hindrances, he devoted hims8lf to the administration of ·the:.: government, the welfare of the country, and the development of its resources. 1 ... Q.£. fi!:.,, in B.~ R., vol. 50, P• 47, -32611 In a docur,ient entitled 'A ,Q'.eneral econom:i.c plan,' ho extolled the advuntages --which are inherent in the promotion and development of agriculture, commerce, and industries. Ho offered therein to bestow rewards and distinctions on the persons who [_;hould exceJ. in agricultur01, in making plantations of cotton, of mulberry troes; and of the choicest spices, as cloves, cinnamon, pepper. and nutmef; to tho;3c who should .establish mahufa::tures of silk, porceJ.rlin, and fnb:cics of hemp, flax, r.u1d cot ton l.:U~e t, hose that werE.i rec cdved frorn the Coromandel Coast, M,1lc1bar, and China; to those who would underta~e to work the mines of gold, iron, copper, and tin; ~o thnse who shouJ.d make discoveric-:i:i useful to tnn Str.1+:,e; and to those who should excel in sciences, the liberal arts, anu rr;echa.nics. He D.lso circ 1J_lo.tcd j_nstr,_wtioni:3 in regard to tha method of cultiv2ting and preparing for use cotton, silk, sugar, etc. He also, in Camarines, ccr:ipel.lecl_ th,3 planting of moru ti::1n four mi]ljons of '"'11,lbe;,.,·;--"r trer-,s whjch for u~nvc:rr•l ·rGars _, . ·\ .J yielded an ~xcell2nt product; but these ii~ort~nt plantations were abandondd after his term of of~ fie e (expired). H8 improved the scLool s, c,nd uj_dcd the diffusion of knowledp.·o by J;,romotin:~ th o 1mnv1ledge of the Co.stilJ.an 1.Emguarc. In order to ]:'epross the boJ. dness of ,::;he rLur-:.lerous hirrhV'Jc:'.YlTIGn who infested the roads in th8 rrovinces nearest to Manila, he appointed judg:es ,:-r/_th ;)oVJr::;r oS-: condemnation (j_l:!.ff..§.2. d~J acorc:ad:..t J; thciso accompanied by a counse11or und an exc,cut:i_oner, by summary process tried the w.::.l efacto rs whom they nrre3tod in their respective clistrict,'3, and appl:Lc:d t:111 penalty - a measure so efficacious that in a short time there was con~lete security avery~hore. the Audiencia appealed 2gainst this monsure, end the king isoued 8 decree hotifying the governor tn abstain from medC.::.lin 5n the jurisdiction of thn.t court. In acknow:iedging the receipt of this soverE:ign command., }fosco remarked that 1 1infortu.nately it had arr::.ved too late.' f,s war h:1d been a.gain declared between Espaiia and Inglatorra, Bcsco · caused the fortifications o,f Manila and c'~:rvit, e, nnci the forts in the provinces, to be ropc1il'od, chansing a ~reat part of the artillery ther~in, for now pieces. He also reorganized the armJ, In ~ - • .L. ,_.,,.._ .... ·~ 1 ,; .; -....,, ' .,_ ·- ~ .., •. • -327- 1778 the order for the expulsion of the Chinese w.J.s revo~ed, dnd. a cons:ideraole number of them returned to }fanila. A royal dee rem of Hovemb er 15, 1777, recommonded the estatlis:1mer~·:::. of an institution in which vagrants and (l:Lsr3ol ut e purson::., mip;lrt. be shut up. Accordinfly, IJc.nueJ. del C8st:i.11o y Negrete, minister of ju::tice for the Phili9pines, drew up and printed ( Sc:,nr:JaJ.oc, 1?79) a monunl of ordinances for the man".v;erii.ent of a general refuge for poor persons, beggars, 1domen of lewd life, nbandoned cldldren, and. orpLans. For this project he had ob\ tained tLe opi~ions of learned persons, all or wham extolled it; and he sent this document.to the l~ng. Besides promotint: all interestr. of m.orality, ,:we the development of agriculture, industry, and commerce, Basco founded the noted "Economic Society of Friends of the C0untr.y. a A royal d E:cree dated Aurust ;t/, l'/80, had ordered him to convmie a2.1 tho learned or competent persons in the colony, 11 in or,ler to form an association of selected persons, capuble of producing usef~l ideas;" but when this decre0 arrived, Basco had already founded the above society. On February 7, :.781, the active members of the ~eneral td.bunal (juntg_) of cornmE:·rc e Lad assembled,· and agreed upon tl:.e consti":.-;ution of the soc:Lot.y, a numher o.f them signing t~1eir name e. as its rnor1ib ers ,;1r.1ong them the IJhrque s de VilJ.amedian1, tr· e prior oi' t:i1e consuJ.c::,te of conmrnrcci. 1"fhc body oi: rncrch'.lnts oncowed tb..e socie·sy -:vith a permanent fund o.f 9t,O pesos a year, the value of two tonelad~s which were assigaod to it in the 12ciin{". of tho Ac.-~p1,'.lco ralleon.11 ThG society v-1as formally inau:_;1u·c1ted on M:i;:cy 6, 1781, under the presidf',nC y of .Ba,:1co, who rnJde an eloquent .si.ddrerrn. Itr, .first prs~ddcmt ·,va3 the quartermaster-general of the islands, Ciriaso Gon~ales C&rvajal; according: to its f'j_rst re:iUJ.utions, it contained the following sectioils; natural history, agriculture, and rural econ0ri1y, factories and manufactures, internal and foreign c01J1merce, industries, and popular educaticn. · "Stiruulated by Ea,sco, the society undertook with g~eat ardor to promotG the cultivation of indigo, cotto~, cinnamon, and pepper, and the silk industry, according to the ordurs published by the superior authority. Tim rarioh pri(;at -328- of Tambobong, Fray Mati:rn Octavio, taught his pa-rishioners to prc:paro the indigo, present:Lng to the society the first specimens, which were adjudged to be of L·mper:Lor quality. In 1781+, the first shipment of this ,u~ticlo to Europa was rno de :Ln the royal frag,1tn 11 Asu.ncion 11 • 'l'hG society also recommended that e~fort ~0 mact8·to attain perfection in weaving and dyGing. ( The society d,Jclin8d gre3.tJ.y after the departure of its founder; and Aeuilar roughly opposod it. In 1809, it w:rn extinguished; two years later, orders were received for its reestablishment, 'but this wns not accornplishod ·1.Lrtil 1319. In the following yos r, its const it ut ion vrns remodeled; and in 1S21 it founded 3.t its own cost a professorship of .:.1gricultur3 ,:;nd an ac.J.domy of desit;n,. and establishecl spGcial :Lnst:cuction in d7/eing. In 1824, it resolved to bestow rewards on the most sucqessful farmers; nnd it introduced from China martins, to r::.rht the locusts ;:,hat were desolating the fields. In 1826, its constitution ex~erienced another revision, ln1t du.Ting :-nore them ha~_f a cenP''-' a ·1uru·il__ -y clI1y - ,c,; ;-· 0.,.f' l·t·· " . c+·, ce • It t U.1.· · v~· 1·t ,.:;c~Vv 0--f::_.D. ::3 eXlu-Jcn f- ' 1-- Oa , .p T -• ·'J • t.. 1 n. <? 1)... + ,-. -, "l...-r:''.. 8,11 h a d a --.Ld.:,LJ. .. "\ lC,3 _l y .Le 00,._, uU-, .::Ou: 1ryg·:n 1·n+o a -lr--c]1"·1c 'flo··'av -{,·,bou l'4-0J' a c·: . v · t...1..,..,; _ l ....... CJ.·· J .v _,._c,-7 , ~-1-ore v .L··- ·.,, 1·s hardly any indication that r-'ian:J_a remembe:."s a society o.r:' this sort; Emd, 3.,s it is not in thE~ S1:lc"'.:..ci._-9._fLLorfil1("C',,-:r,,::::. -f'o,-- s_,__r·c·nP'orcfl) J .J.. .;t.··n·,.r be uc._. .-,··1-ia·· t P'~oc, vu l"u..J_,...1......, ..... ... ·'-h'·'t ithas ceused to exist.-/ 1,.., 1 ..! v-, t:' ...1. ..1. ,1..:.i.. J,, ...,,.l. V ..l. C, ..... . U .1. .. U,.J U -I..~ 11 Ji'ilipinas !"1cH1. been, untiJ. the clrrival o:f the Ba· "CO '\T,Y r·.,, C' 1· n the ,... ('.J 11........ r,t 1'."-{ a 1''10 '1VY' V C~. rP'.') ·:-::,._..i\_-., burdEn on the capit~l, since every yc2r the si~uado wa.s sent in cash from J\:e,d.co to rnee+:. tte obli~ations of the island:3. In orde::, to :'.:re. e :sspan.'J. from t 1.l1i 0• sor+ of 7 o·,d ;.,r1c1' ·1-0· r•,:,1' s.~ tn' e ec·-L1.,..,·-,,-;_- -f'1..,or11 u its depressed condition, he conccived·th2 vast proje::::t of stimulatin12; th.e cultivation of tobacco, by estatliah::..ng a governmen~ ri1onopc;]_y o:~ it. He commun~_cated his plan to t~1e Sp3.n:i_:::;h government; and by a royal order of February 9, 1760, the monopoly of tobacco, similar to that which was in forc0 in the other dominions of the nation, w&s docreed. Hci immedii.:teJ.y publ:i.shed tv,10 i_Jrocl3.mc":ition::;, on December 13 and 25 respectiv(;J.y, in 1'781, proldbit:ing tl-1e sJ.l e, traffic, 1:~nd 1i10..nuf acture of t 01)2 c co; c1nd on February 16, l782, he issued (signed and scaled by 1 uc,t ·rions l· 1 _,_ \,,...' _,_ lA U \.... . V ~..J .l... . J.. (.... . ' .. L . V -~-- 1,, .....,, _, J - , 1 . , .'. ' l. ..J ~-- .J ,,.J~ ..L ., -329himself), 'Instructions which are gj_ven to all the. commanders or heads of the patrols, the provincial administrators, the market inspectors, and other persons vJho anJ under obligo.tion to prevent loss to the revenue from tobacco,7 These were directed to the pre·1e11tion of smuggling, showing the way in which ::i..nve;.3t:.:. vat·Lons shr",1 d be conducted including the housr3s of parish priects, the convents, collegas, and beaterios, the quarters of the soldiers, etc. He crr:~at ed a board of direction for this revenue, a general office of administration or agency, and subor~inate offices to this in the provinces. Br.tsc0' s idea vms strongJy opposed by var:Lous interects; but t~1e governor 1 s energy was able to conquer this unjust oppo:3ition, and the monopoly was orgoni~rnd on Marc.::h 1, J_'ifi2; it constituted the basis of the prosperity of the e:::chequer in that country, and its most importc:rnt source of revenue. 11 The z0alous gove:t·nor v:i.sited the provinces in persor,, in ord,3r to ir.fon11 himsolf o:r:' their needs and to remedy the::rn, compelling ·~ heir governors and other functionaries to fulfill their tru~ts as they should. He also oiganized various militcry e:~editions to occupy the Igorrot country. it 2. The Tobacco Monopoly, 1 By far the richest of tbe str\t8 rnonopolies in revenue-producing capacity was ~::,he ·i~obacco nonopoly, which, moreove:t', proved not le.ss :;_rn})OJ:'tant as a factor in the general e~onomio ~erelopment of the is:_ands ttan it 1-vas for thE, t:.."o&su:'.'y. 'i'he establis::irr,ent of tliis monopoly net -~v:i.th :.:r'~tcbbor11 resista:1cc 0:::1 the part o·:' the nc::.ti'Jt);~. '.~hoy 7_ooked upon tolac~o as a urimo nece,ssitf. bsin,: c:,ccustorned to its use a1rnost, from inLc1cy, a11cl n:1turally otjecced to the 1:Lrr.itation of its cultiv.:·,tion and .... J. • ,. .... ..,, s2.l. e • 1 - C. :: • Pl.ehn, HTaxation in the Philippines, 11 ,Egli..: tical Science Q·.1arte:cJ.:1:, v~J.. 16, pp. 680-711; vol. l?, pp. 125-Ua. -330- The maintenance of this monopolv involved: (1) the prohibition of the cultivatio; of tobacco outside of tertuin districts; (2) the strict regulation oJ' the m:iount to b u raised within those districts, which in turn, on account of the inertness of the nativeri, involved compulsory labor on the part of those or;c e Cff1.ga:r,<2d in its production; ( 3) the prev1antion of coiltr::ibcmd sales, whether of tobacco taken frorH th(; crop permitted to be raise.d or of other tobacco; (4) the purchase of the entire crop by the 0 o·rernmcnt at 1:.1 price deter:nined by the authorities; ( S) tl.1e insp0ction of the growinc; crops; (6) the inspection and classification of the product as to quality; (7) the preparation of the tobacco under r.i:ove:r.nuent supervision; (3) the manufacture of cigars, cigarettes, etc., in sovernmont factories; (9) the prohibition of t~e exportation or {ruportution o; tobacco except by the ~overnment; (10; the collection and purchase of as much as possible of the tobacco raised in districts nDt fully under government control, At first the cu.ltiv2tion 0f' tobacco was confined to t-·he district of Gapan, in the province of l'Jueva Ecij a, to certain districts in the C,::1gayan valley and to the 1ittl G island of i.ili:i.rj_nduque. It was not until after 1C28 that it was found that the tobacco from the Cagayan valley was both 1)ett.er in quality and chenper to raise than that of Gapan. Belore the closu of the monopoly the o.uthorized tobucco-p1anting dis·cricts ¼ere in t tie provinces of Cagayan, ~a Isabelo, La Union, Abra, Ilocos Sur, Iloco s 1~0::. t c .:J:1.d Nueva Esij a, a].l in northern or north-central Luzon. Collections of tobacco raised withou~ r;overnuent · supervision were made in the Visaya.s afte;r 1[3~.0 and among the Igo:rot()S o~ the north after 1e42. 0 The incom8 GnJ the expenditures of tho tobacco monopoly were the lar~est item3 in the budget. In 1880-dl the gross ~e-ceipts arnount,:;d to 8,571,200 pesos, against which were chorged; for tobacco purchased, 1,548,110 pesos; 0ther mater ... ials, 28,614 po.sos i expr.:nses of collection, 80, l!i-75 pesos; cost of· marn.un.cturo, 1, JOLi-, 061 pc1sos; cost of ~3Upervi:3ion, 152,,58;2 pr'~SOSj other 8Xf(}l1i:3US, i11- -331- eluding estimated p:coportj.on of expense of the genernl admini:3tnition of all monopoliN'i, 50 ,000 pesos; leaving a net revenue of nearly 3,500,000 pesos. 3, Thu R0al Cor.rrpofiia de Filipinns. 1 That r·1p:u for s-oeculc1.tion in 0rien'tt.l Sens which seized -~11 tha ~ations of Europe also aroused ,, . .f rom h er J.n . d :u.1 . '·. " e:renc e t-..,owar,d s comrncrcia~. . l enopc.nn tcrpri3 eEJ ,2 The rnerc:.v-J.nts of Cadiz, encourae:ed by the profits which thoy ohtainr~u from their exclusive trGde -wi.th America, proposed to establish ani)ther monopoly over the tr·ode of the isli.J.nc'Ls of th2 EDst, and obtained from t.ho rn0rw.rch due autho:city to establisl1 a company of the Philippine::-:: (Cor:1pafiin de Filipinas), 1 mder Jche cc::duJ.a of March ?9, 1733. Under this cedulo., -:.ho Cornpafiia dn Filipinas enjoyed many privilei:ses. But thE:1 merchant.G of I-frJ.nila wer·e opposed to tlw granting of'i, th,.:::se privileges, As a result the proposed con~any did not come i~to being. However, the need of extending the trado of ~he Islands was stror!.R:lv felt in Mc:tr1ila. The oxiOf'-' f_T-!'01•JJ'r,,' !-::l1"ld. ".Ln._,.,,,1- do'r(·,]_0Dl nf-'' b'!Prc1·e,.. _,, i .... :~ peo·1·J]8 · and the ::Jpect::tcle of ot;--1er nat:Lons activoly engaged in trade in Oriental seas gave rise to the idea that JVbnil a should obtain comma d.ii:, iGE, right at the places where they were produced, Accordingly, the Gover0 J. ,,_, • C:\ '• ..) :, ....... <.:..") ._ • C.1 -.. ~ U J ...,, 'II -··- -·------1 - :i<~::c erpts from chapters 9, 10 and 11 of LiL.1.i.9.££tad do. Com0.:ccio ,~n Jas I2la~: Filtvinas, by IJhLuel Azcan.•2.ga Y Palmero, d 1~adric., 1671). The author, a FjJ_ipino-Spaniarrl, had b oen Al.c falde M2.yor of Caf & yan and of Buldcan, and, at one time, Civil Governor of l'Jianila. 2 - In the early years of the 17th century England, Holland and Franc c chartered comm0rci::ll compcmies to engage in trnde in the East. Elrnd.::n1d hud her. East India Company, Holland t11f~ Dutch East Indiu Company and France, the French East India Company. Through their re.spective India Companies, EngL:rnd, Holland and Franc c carried on their commercial and colonial activities in the Far East. .332 ... nor, in 1717, dispatched the frigate "Deseada" to the coast of Malabo.r to establish conm1ercial l"'elations with the :t:nbob of Carnot. 'rhe attempt, l10wevcr, proved unprofitable nnd hence vvas abandoned. After the signing of the treaty of peace with England, the number of Europ2an vessel.;:, ?l:,ting Asiatic flae:s incroGsed, But the true nationalit7 of those v~ssels was so well known that the fiscal of His Majesty wac obliged to appe~l to the Real Audiencia asking for prompt .:1 nd severE: pun:i.sh1,>.?11t for those foreigners who were violating, in such open manner, 1::.he existing la,vs, 'rhe su1Jerior tribunal, with mucJ1 prudence, and t~ddn:~ into consideration the great harm that -would come to the cor,u·,mnity by imposing penalty for violations which for some time were being tolerat0d, li.itd.ted itself to notifying the aforementioned l"renchr;-:en that, if they ever r·eturned to the port of Manila to sell merchandise, they would be penal:L~ed to the full extent of the law. This decision was based on the fact that, if the said vessels and the buyers of their cargo were to be proceeded ag2inst, action must be taken against all the residents of·the city. The go,)d ldnl!. Carlos III for sure did not. look with indifference U,l)On the ab::mdonment and isolation of the ?hilippines, and the em:i_nent uen who surrounded him cou:_d not but see thci cause of this state of affairs ancl the rr;eans of combattj_r.,g :i.t. · It was therefore £1.gr2ed to o.sta"olish o. r:irect communicat~on between Jviani2.a and Cadiz via th € l~npe of Good Hope and to adept measures that would devcl6p the resources and the commerce of these Islands, ~ith a view to freeir..g them frcm their cl8pcndonce unon Mex~co. For this purpose, a war v0ssel was to be di~;1;2tc}1c::d annually from Cadiz to Mani:L:-1 with the privilege of loading there, on the accoant of the merchants of Manil-=t, native products and fall kinds of Oriental goods, j_ncl 1ding those of Chino. a~1d India. In line with this purpose, the rostric~ions on trade with the Far East were revoked. 1 The frigate ?uenconsejg_ was the first to make the exp edit ior't und()I' this nrrang ement, arriving in Manila in 1765.. Partly because of unum1al attach- -333- ment to rout.inn ond to thot,e petty ctrntoms 1:hich create Gxclusivism and monopoly, and partly because of the restrictions connected with the new venture, the idea was not well received in Manila. The merchants refused to tate pa:ct in the lo a dine; of the veGsel anci it w~s necessary to load it on the account o:f the k:Lnp;, 1;1hile, according to rnuor, the goods were concealed so that the vessel could not tako on any cargo. Nevertheless, t, he vessels of the governrwmt continued to make those expeditions until l'li:trch 1785, when the frigate Asuncirn1 madG the Jl+th Emel 1.1~~t vo-· y,qge. But this met,hod C a:crying on tracl.e }ic;td not been adopted except as an experirrent and as a means of opening the way to private interests, which were expected to take advantage of this traffic 2nd of tho newly opened route. -of The terr.1 of the C:Jm::,afiia Guipuscoana de Caracas having 0xpirec:, end ::Lts rneGbers not desiring to continu0 the ~;v.s iness without, the former r,riviJ. eges, the stocktolders deci~Gd to transfer opor~tiono to Oriental regions as well as the capital still remainin8, The proposed bases of a new association hav:J.ng been presented, ~he king promulga"jed a royal order authoriz:Lng -~he c:ci:J&tion of the Real Cornpafiia de Filipir..as, I:£3.rch 10, 1785. Article 2 of this decree fixed the capita]. of the Company at C",OOG,000 pesos divided i::.to 32,000 shares of !"'250 a share. 'l'he rnonarc.;h sho1rrnd 3nch in-1~ erest :J.n the success of this Compeny tJ·at, not on~.y did he invite the B,;;,_:pco Nacio~1.82. dG f'.on Cnrlos and the ccmpanies in Sevilla and Hav&~a, LS well as thu munic i.pa.:i. ities to taice part in ::.t, l:'.i 1 lt al no he hirnsel: bouz;ht shares to the vc.;lue of 1,c,r;c,000 pesos, in addition to the shares which be~on~ed to him as a member of the Cornpaiiia de Cc:racac. The princ.;ipaJ. pur::)()ses of the Compcmy wcn·c t') put into comrnunicat:i.on all our colonies .'.lmong tLemsel ves and with th-o Liotn.E:1' country, to e11cou:race commerce with the countr~es of Asln; to give greater scopi.=:, to the commarc e of th,3 Philipp~.ne;:;, and to take advantage of tie direct route b8twoen Cadiz and -334Manilc.1 which the gov8rnment vessels ht::id used. Its operntj_ons were to cons:i.13::, in :,upplying Manila o.nd th.8 Isl anrl.s w :i.th all kinds of ,,,::oods from Europe and Americ~, domestic and foreign,-nnd to carry in return spice8 and othar native products, as well as manuf.::-:ctures o.f the .?h:i_li:;Jpine,s 2nd o:: other Asiatic countrj.es, in the tr~de with which it enjoyed, under li.rtir:le 23 of thE'1 aforementioned cedula, e::clusive priv:11 ege:J, Consoque~+,ly, t.11e Company could ~'~end, negotiate, and dispatch, like .siny other subject, vessr)lS registereii for the Ancricdn dominions, but it could do this only from the ports of the Peninsula o.ncl. not from Ivio.nila. l,Ioreovc:r, it could send expeditions to ChiDa and India to obtain the effects and products necesf:'.ary to itEi commerce, .:1 nd to establish factories in the ports of those nations. The Company also had d.nother purpose nnd that was to stimulatrJ the developr1ent of the wealth which lay hidden in those Islands snd to encoura~a an active exporting businGss, hence, under article 50 of the cedula, the Company was obliged to apply 4-% of tte net profit of' its opert:ttions to t.1-ir-1 deyelo:pmerit of agriculture a~d manufac~ures in these Is!unds, the board oi director.::; re.sidin~ in Manila i)oin;z :r·e-· quired to propose to "eh(~ c:ourt -·vvhatevr:n~ it thoug:1t proper for the fulfillment of this imnortc.TG duty. Under the next article, thi:~ Company wo.s aJ,so otliged to carry, freo of <2hc::r?;e :Ln itJ ves::rnls, the professors of n3tural and exact sciencos and those artisans who, of tl1E,ir own ::"rce ,1,1i~l or by order of the ~overnmPnt, would Jo to the Islands, whether Spaniards or forotfners. Dnrler nrticlc 52, one third uf the crew of itc vesccls ~hould b0 natives of the Philippinos, In retu~n fo~-~~ose oblig?tion~, the_U~n~any was granted, in ada1t1on to the ~pec1dl priv~lcge of b3ing the only one which could carry on direct trade between tha por~s of the Peninsula and those of China and Indin, others o±' nmch importonce. Of these, the one which was undoubtodly of most valuo . ·..1 ege 01,, ucnng . was t ,ne pr1v1 t .h 8 r-lag of the roya 1 -335·· navy in all its vesseJ.s. Besides, the Cornpany could, during thE::, first two years, acquire foreign vessels and register them free of cost; introduce, also free of duty, all the effects destjned for its vessels; and obtain from the roy~l ar~enals all the naval stores wh~L.ch it needed, paying .for t,llern t11e same price whic11 the governL1ent. had paid. In tho selection o.f personnel for its vessels, the Company was also grant.ad adv,~rntr1g~~ous pd.vilcges, for not onJ.y could it employ under contract forcifn seamen, only •,dth proviso that tlie first .1.ncl. sec011d mates and at least on€ half of the crew must be nationo.ls, but also it was authorized to summon to the service officiu.ls of tbe royal navy. MorE-3over, for the b;:mcf'it of the Company ull the laws, practices, orders and royal decrGes 1•Jhich,-pr0hibit2d the· import2ti.on into the Peninsula of muslins and cotton and silk textiles were revoked, it3 vessel::-, bG:~ng autLorized to buy all ki.nds of cloths manufactures from India, China and Japan, being onl·y rt:guir0d to p&y 57t of the current values of these goods. As a speciul concesf3ion., - the products of the Philippinos 1.1:ore in those of' the Poni.ns'J.la. U·1der l 1~~J~ U V s) 1 ~ 7 '71 16 l ~ ·t,i't.I~ C +.; ' ·boo~ · ··' q.· of the Recopilacio:c1 de la.J leycs de Indi::rn, all subjects of His :vrnj esty, whether of.' the f enin::;t'la or from America, were forbidden to trade with Asiatic countries including th~ Philippines. Tho latter, as a special 9rivilop;e.t was alJ._owed to sm1d onl7 one vessel to Acapulco. These prohibitions ware revoked in the interest of the Gompc-:ny. ' Likewise, law 9, title 18, book l and lCt',JS 3~and 35, title h5, book 9 of tbi 2b0Vc:;-n,en-L~:i.0ned Hecopilacion, which forbade tb.e merclr::nts of I,IaniJ.a to entor into ne~otiat:ions vdth the ports of Chin,1, and India, and which regulated in c1 mo.s t vexinr; mu 111er the traffic wh!ch t.he Chinese c2rried on ~ith that city, werr: revoked. Consequently, the merchants of the city were now at l~b2rty to disputch vessels to the·, por·1· " ' of C1'·1in"' ct"' 1a' I···1·· 1 1·.,, J ···1·1d 1·0 ~ca1,·i·"e -f'rorn .L then the manufacturerJ which '1'18I'G in much rl.emaad, without waiting for the Chinese crwmpans or Armenia11 veo' ,·· ' ':l"d. ) (; , ; ) 1 V 1.) - Cl. 1.L •. J. ...., C_ L.-!. .J Cl J ....t.-1,.• .I_ • -336sels which used to monopolize this trade, At the some time, the Chinese werr-; gi"!nn ~rec:,ter opportunity to sell in l'-Tanila their goods and to i)uy tr,ose of the:: country, ilitl1out being bc'ither'.:;d by the intervent ion of deputies -1.r.1cl other obr-,taclns which Wel'o established undor the name of pancada, •• 3 At tho s1me time that they began to despatch cargo, the directors of t nc Company devoted the111SE-l ves to the production of thl':1 country, 1n·,1::ing heavy advani:!eG to .furmers and 1ayirw down conditiorn:J of purchase which were very 3dvantageous, They specially wero interested in the production of silk, indigo, suga:, and cot~on, as these were the article:';, which had better prospeG'ts and which had been under cultivation for some time in the country. • , • The Cornpan/, lil-:ev:ise, desired to cJodicate part of its capital to canufacturGs in the Islands. It wanted to make of the co~_ony n.s rich in iWturuJ. resources a manufacturj_ng count rJ, wnr::::rc t ho raw materials of industry ure so abundant and whore wages are so cheap, It expected to make the ozi:stin~ J.uoms 3 - 'l'he' term iipanca.do_l! i::3 used to de::.:d.2:n'lte tho system under which. foreign COl\')ff;ocLLtie3 WE.re sold upon their arrival at the port o.f Manila, . As regulated. by the d ccree of August 9, 15e9, the system '/Ja:::~ .as follovrn: 11 • • • no C11incse or for·· eign .ships could sell at retail the good.s vJhich tLey c2-rried to the islands, •. ; nor could th0; inh~i.bitcmt ::-; buy tho [Y,oods, openly or in secret, under severe penal.ti,3s, Tho p1J.rche.se of the said goods wus to be discus3ed by the nouncil, and as many and so qualifiert rernons a~ thg business dn10nd8d were to be appointed. These persons a lonl) s ho,1ld buy in Ll lot all the merchandise brou,~ht by tLe ships, und then distribute it fairly amon~ the citizens, s,anish, the CtinoJe, and the Indians, at the same price nt which it should te appraised. (E.~ R., vol. 7, p. 13g.) The order of Aurust 9, 1589 W3~3 repeutcd by the decrees of January 11, 1594, June 11, 1~95, January 25, 1596, and August 9, 1689. -337- manufacturing cotton shirtings, rayadillos, guinaras, tapestry, terlingas, 1 inens, carnb rics, and other textiles into D. grr:~at man:1facturing industry, and proposed to put their products in competition with those from BengaJ. and Coromandel. In this venture the Company swJi:.:::ined enorrr..ouE; J.osses. By 1790, according to a statement, the Company had invested ll,E\JG,000 reales vellon of its capital and 3,241,000 in edifices. The sta·~r;r:ient also shows that after five years of operqtion, it had notestablished commercia~ relations with India, China, and .Japan. It limite;d itself to acquiring, froLi the beginning, the com'.:ioclities fror:1 those countries from the merchants of ManilE:. Such & transac:t::Lon was very disadvantageous to the Company, for it usually paid 90% more than the prices p2id at the places of production. Moreo7er, "'.:;he S'.)ciety was not fulfilling one of its princifal purposes, which was toestablish direct trade with Indii and China • • In vieillJ of the small quantity of Oriental goods that it could obtain at lVIanila, the Compa:1y as!ced the Court for nn extension of articles 29 and 30 of its charter. The Government granted the r8ouost August 2, 1789, as a result of--wtich the port of Manila was· deJl&red free and open to the vessels of European nations for a period of three years. Under this permit, Europeans could introduce and· ,sell in Manila all kinds of Asiatic_ goods, except :Guropean commodities. . For the first time, flags of European nations appe2,red at the bay of ]\'..nnila as symbols of peD.ce and corr.m~rce. All of this had no purpose othf.')r than to favor the interests· of the Company. The Company also obtained in 1803 a royaJ permit to send annuallv one vessel from tte nort of Manila to Amer:Lca, {Jith (i';Oods to th8 Vo.lU:e of 300,000 pesos. The expeditions, however, were to be confined to Peru, in order that the Acapulco galleon mi?-:ht not be interfered with in the loast. In this wai commercial relations were establishe4 anew with the vice~royalty of Peru. -33$- In 1305, King Carlos IV issued a royal ord~r . 1 or1.1=~in.?. • ,, n • Dt t'ne cuarc,r~r 1-~ _c, , ' ,-, ffi pro 1:u. 01. r:.ue ,..,o .. • ~- .1.or , .een • y2ars .. , f p&ny, w1tn ~he Scime pr1v1lezes as oe oro. ~11e capital was fixed at 12,500,000 pesos, cHvid2d into shares of 250 poses each, tho King acqu~rine 3,943,000 pesos worth of stock. ~ m1, Notable chunr.:es were mDde i.n tho new chartor. In the first place: foreiznorc, were a'1thorizcd to own shares and·to dispose freely of the same. In the second place, vessuls going to China and India for merch1nc:ise ~oeld sail dire·::t to the Peninsula without cal::.ing '1t tnc r-:or~ of Mariila. And lastly, the ?rivilege granted for a period of thres ~ears to foreign vess,:~ls to import foreign mercr,3.ndise to Ifanil.J. 2nd to export nnthre products was mado perpetual. In 1830, the privileges of the Cor,pany were revoked and the port of }fanila was definitely opened to foreign nations. The Real Compafiia de Filipinas for vario11s reasons failed to come up to the expectations of it.s fouriders end promoters. In the first place, the Company, in the words o/ Dr. T. H. ?ardo de Ta7era, wc:s 11 badl y r·1a.~ased, making absurd commercial operations, and followed no true mercan- tile principle." Another contributory factor to its fail- ure 1r1as the hostile attitude towards tLe Sor:::pany on the part of the merchants of Manila. The CompE.ny, howevor, con- tributed to a certain extent to the economic prorress of the Philippines. In the words of Dr. Ta·,era '-, "Th(~ encouragement given by th3 head Compa-fiia to develop indust1°ial and agricultural pro due~ -339- tion, backec. by the money it had clis'::,ributed in the provinces with that purposo, hqd at length to produce their results and if the Go:r1pany did. £'ail, on the other :1and, thanl:s to it, Philippine prod.uction made considerable procres."li- I -··-----·--4 - ' Resul ts 1 of the Economic Development of t ~10 Phil- ippines", a pqper r8ad before the PhilipJine Golu~Ji2n Associatio11, 1912. -340CHAPTER SEVEN THE PHILIPPIKES AT THE CLOSE OF THE 18TH CENTURY. (1) The Government of the Philippines Of conditions in the Philippines at the close of the eighteenth century, an excellent surve7 is that contained in J0aquin Martinez de Zufliga's Estadismo de las Islas FiMartinez de Zufiiga, an Agustinian friar, made a :::..ipinas. tour of the Philippines in 1800, in the company of Ignacio ) Maria de Alava, commander of a Sr1anish fleet which had come to thG Philippines at that time. In the Estadismo, written shortly after he returned from his travels, Father Zufiiga set down detailed observat~ons nf conditions ill the provinces that h~~ visited as wel:::.. as of various phases of the Spanish colonial administration in the Philippines. The following passages, dealing 1·1ith t be colonial administration are taken from tr.e edition of the Estadisrr,o., published in 1893 by Wenceslao Retana: The first tribunal of Manila is~ that of th0 Governor. In order to understand his power and authority, it is necessary to reproduce here what the Frarciscan history has ~o say on this point: (Part I, Book I, Chapter 61)-L 1 - This is the famous wor:c of the Franciscan friar; Fr. Juan Francisco de San Antonio 1 in three volumes entitled, "The authority, grandeur, and supe ricri ty of the Governors of these Islands have no equal, even in the greatest of the many viceroyalties of Europe that are subject to the Cro~n ~f Spain, for none of these has such extended dominions. Neitter is there any Governor or Viceroy, who enjoys the preeminence that belongs to the Governor of the Philippines in relation to the receiving and sendir:g of ambassadors to all the kingdoms of this realm, the declaration of war, ~he conclusion of peace, the takfng Jf measures of vengeance on behalf of the Catholic Majesty, prerogatives which·the,Governor cculd exercise wi ttout waitir:g for orders from Spain. As a result many crowned kings rencered by vassalage to the G'.'Jvernor of the Philippines, and, recognizing him as their superior, held him in respect, feared him in arms, sought in earnest his friendship, and received punishment from him whenever they failed to comply with their promises ••.• The Governor bears the title of Governor, Captain General, and President_ of the Real Audiencia and as such has sole· authority to decide all rr.atters relating to the royal treasury, government and war, acting with the advice of the Auditors only in matters of great importance. He also h3d prnver to hear in the first instonce criminal cases involvi:1g the paid soldiers; to provide for Alcaldes, Correj imientos, Teniantazgos, and 0ther justices in all the Islands; to exercise with the assistance of th8 Chief Clerk (appointed by the king) of the department of administration and war, t,he powers of government, just ice, war; to have his Gu-3 rd of twel vo halberdiers who always accompany his person; and several other powers. Ee receives as salary eight t~ousand pesos de minas, and 450 n:iaravedis, making all in all, 13,235 pesos and 3 gramos de oro ccmun." To the original salary 0f the govErnor has been added what he gets from the cont rabands which raise it to about 20,0C0 pesos. The Governor has C~rS;Jnic as de la Apos·t, olic a Provine ia de San Grep-orio de Re~~g~-o~os Descilzos de N, S. P, E,an 1'=£QQ.9.}.:.l:3co__Q.~.d:§.£. IJ?l.§..?_].lipinas. It was printed in the Phil:_ppi nG s in the year 1738. -342an Auditor of w2r, who serves as assessor in all disputes. The judicial proceedings are referred to one of the two fiscals of the King for legal opinion; then they go to the assessor with whose decision the governor ordinarily agrees. This office of the assessor is very lucrative for, aside from the two t hcusand pesos salary which the Ying grants to him, he enjoys. certain feos, and, bGsides,. receives five hundred pesos for each of the roy~l revenues. Abov-e all, he possesses much power, be being the man on whom rely for the satisfactory settlement of their eases those wno in Jfanil-3, come under milit,ary juricdiction, or who are exempted from ordinary jurisdiction by reason of their being employed in connection with the royal revenues. Few indeed are those who would want to antagonize him, :f. or, when they least expect it, they get involved in a dispute, and of course thev would want that he renders an opinion favorable· to their cc:use. For this reason, his position is one of great distinction, for he is looked upon as a sort of a minister of the Governor, who can exercise if he wants to greater authority than that of the king himself in the Court of Jv:adrid. With regard to the Real Audiencia, I shall refer to Chapter 63 of the Franciscan history already mentioned: "The Real Audiencia and Chancillery of the city of Manile, capital of the Philipnine s, has wider jurisdicticn and a:.ithoritv thrrn an7 other under the Spanish momirchy, because r8siding only in Menila, it comprehends the whole is land of Luzar: and the vrhole Archipelago, in accordance with the provisions of the new roya 1 :.:,rders of May 5, 1583, end 1/loy 26, 1596. It wrn founded, for the first time in the city of Manila: in the year 1584, on the suggestion of the first Bishop of Manila, Fray Dpmingo de Salazar 1 in the same manner and with the sam3 foroEJ.lities followed elsewhere in the Indios. In tlF, year 1591, the Audiencia w~s 2uppressed, its existence beinG deemed unnecessary and the creation of an army of four hundred soldiers bE:ing then considered more urgsnt. .. But in the yeer 1598 the l~ing determined tc re-establish it, as in effect it was done, the Royal seal which contained the order bE:dng received with the traditional solemnity on the 8th of May, 1598. -343- As constituted, it was compos cd of a Pr~sident, who was Governor Fra~cisco Telloi and the Auditors D. Antonio de I-:Iorga, Cristobal Tellez Almosa, Alvaro Rodriguez Zambrano, and Geronimo Salazar. Ever since that time thG Audi(rncia has borm constituted by a Presidont, v,Jho is always the Govurnor the Philippines, four Aaci.itor.s, and one Fiscal with his counsellor at law, clerk of court, and attorneys, chaplain, agent o.f the treasury, porter, sacristan, majordomo, and four Indian porters, a lawy9r for poor prisoners, an attorney for the poor, a warden of the court prison with hj_s li(Jut Emant and servant, and constables. The snlary of the Pr·a,sident is included in the eight thousand pesos already no-t;ed. The auditofs)and the fiscal receive 3,308 pesos, 6 tomines, x and 6 gra1;10s de oro a year. The other officials have their respective ~alaries." of To the Real Audienc:ia hss been added a Regent and a Fiscal of the Royal ExchBguer, so that the fiscals of the king arc two, one for the RoyaJ. Exchequer, and one for the Civil Departm3nt. ;In the absence of one, the other takes charge of·th0 two offices, which give him much to do; and, inasmuch as in this country t:ental labor is very prejudicial, many f'iscals have succumbed under the weight o.f so many judicial proceedings, whi~h take place in the Philippines and which they are called upon to handle. The Regent is ·the one that directly governs the Audiencia, because the Governor, although he is President, tak,:;s li·~tle part in its businoss, and gen0rally signs decisions without exanining them, and even without seeing the trial. The Real Audiencia was establisheJ to check the despotism·of th~ governors, a thing which was never fulfilled, for the gowned gentle2en are always the weaker, and the Governor can place th9m under arrest and have them sent to Spain, banished to the provinces under the pretext that they must take a census of the Indians, or locked up at .Fort Santiago, as has frequently been done. Granting that these two tribunals enjoy equal res~ectability, in cases of notorious injustice there should be an appeal from the coin). (x) Third part of a drachm. (Drachm, a copper nickel -344- one to the other, In addition the Auditors should enjoy the right of inviolability of ti1.cir per.sons for the violation of which on the part of the governors rigorous punishm0nt shouid be meted out. In this way the Real ~udiencia would pro7e very useful to th,Jse Islands. 0;..;hcrv,:is.:;, t.ne: fu.d.ler:cicJ. would not ha of mucb -,1::3e; V1u c2ses that arise mic;ht as wall be decided by tho Govsrnor himself, and in this way there would be fe\Jer of them and tl1E-J expenses entailed would.not oe so burdensome, Tte 8abildo, or the City, which is the body that repres~nts the whole city of Manila, is composed of two alcnldes-in-ordinary t~lcaJ.des ordinario), eigh~ regidorea, a clerk, and a chief car.stable (alguacil ffay,Jr). The governor of· the .fort an6 the royal officic.ls hD.ve seats in the Cabildo but they-· can not take part in the deliberations. The juri~diction of the city ext ends throughout t Le di strict of Manila and fi ,-e leap;t:es all around, and includes the supervision into ~he supply of provisions, and the i:nposi'::.ion oi fines on "'.":,hose wto 80Lrrni·s frauds -;n c~n,...,, ...... . ti..,.::. r1c Sal__ -" of' ·o· _,.,..,,,.,a' co. , ·1·.,n~··-v, a -.1.- E'c .,u, -~ru·J·-1-" t-:J, etc • 7he two alcaldes-in-ordinary de~ide disputes that are ~aken to them in the first instance cS.nd exercise royal jurisdiction. As a sy1bol of thGir au+-t-· y, tlney · a"'_we.ys 7 • , ·JHorit cGr-ry a can,::. rci, L1e re:;10.ores, 0 ~ ..L _ li\_..ct • _; clerks and cons~ables are per~ancnt o~ficials, for their positions have b~en purchased. Ttesg they can sell, if the~ so desire, or mev ~eauea~h them to their children. MThe alcaldes-in-o;din(ry are electe0. annuall ~r from ari,on~ the resid ~r1ts C>f l\~2niJ.a. Their s2la;ies come f;om c~~tain income of tte Acapulco trade which on tte average an:ou,rts to 1 1000 pesos 2 yec::r. 0 ~he Tribunal del Consulado (Co:1SuJ.at0) 2 was esta-olished 2bo·1t forty ysars ago.. I'.1 ±'or:ner years cases no~ cocing undsr its jurisdiction were decided by the Govarnor or the Real Audiencia; at present the ~ity of l~1anila co:J.nts ".-v:Lth a tri'Ju::1.21 of t~ivo consuls a:::1d one Prior, who decide all c2,ses relatj.rig to the trade and commdrce of these islands. Anpeal :'rorn this tribu~1al may be t~ken to the Tri~)unal 2 - Established by the real cedula of De~. 19, 1,./69, -345- de Alzada, which is constituted by an Auditor and two merchants nominatc:d ":)y him. Decisions of this b-ody are final unle3s re\rol::ed by the Consejo de Indias. The election of Prior of the Gonsulado is done every ye3.r; that of consuJ.s, every two years. In order to have always a scni~r meJhar in the Tribunal and not t~o new_ones, evary year orie of the consuls is renewed. The duly qualified electors of the Consulate choose twelve Elec~ors, and, on New Year's day; th~se assembl,a and choo,s e tte Pd.or and one consul. The samo proc edur 3 is fallowed by the city in the election of alcaldas-in-ordinary, which is hel.d at the same time. These eloctions us 1.1ally cause r:Guch excitement in the city durin.z ·'.:;hc: election days. Even in tl·1e absence of an· Ati--ditor, very frequently the elections ~re feature-id '!Jy dissentions 1 which are terminated only by the governor, to whom the results of th~ election are delivered, and who, by his approval, enables the successful dandidatos to enter upon their duties and to receive their sa- 3 laries, which are paid from the fund of the averia. 3 - Gne of the most interest in!! of the oJ. der miscellaneous charges on conm1erce -was the average ( averia), established fo~ all Spanis~ trade in 1528 and finally abolished in the Philippines in 1871. In its final form this was an ad valorem t2x, the proc e2ds of which sup~-:iort cd a commercial court, while the surplus was p2,id into the li_=shthouse fund. Its name is significant of its history. It originated in those days \'Jhen the encnii 3S of S:jain nade the ocean so uncom..fortable fo::.~ her merchant sh::.ps that t:1ey were accustomed to sail in fleets, accompanied :or protsction by one or more war vessels. The cost of this protection was divided as an average between thij ship and her cargo, in much the same manner as narti9.l loss is d:.st:ci:rnted in marine insurance today. L;tcr the passe~;ers were also included in this distribution of costs. Ti1_;_s a 10ra.ge early became a tax at fixed rates. 2:t was int:.~oc'ucod into the archipelago by virtu0 .cf th0 royal Codula of De:::eir:ber 19, 1769, Which established a court of first instance for hearing commercial c2ses. Its admi::iistr,:l'tion w.:.s 3.t first in charge of this court but in 1832 was transferred to the customhouse. The averia at this time amounted to one ::>er cont .on Spanish goods imported under the Spanish flag and two porcent on foreign goods importod under a foreign flag. 'l'he yield wns 0 -346- The Real Contaduria ( Royal accountancy) is composed of thr00 royal officials: factor, accountrmt, and tre2sur0r, each recrdving tnree thousand pesos. Bosides these, t:1e:-u arr:.: othJr officials and dependents with their corr0spon~ing s~lariGs. The royal officials '.Jere D.ppoL1'~cd ·':,c:i audit the accounts of the Alca:des 1~yor~s, rJcciv2 what these have collected from the trib 1x~e of tLe ::;:nclia.n.s, co11Pct all that pertains t'.) the rcyal t1·r::asury, ·inc. pay in sil..,J t h 2 expenses o:t tn3 . .1un::!: , . .ir. +-' · . ver a-'-_ ,.,,1e F'·~·. ni_1_:::.pp1nos. There is, more0vr;r, in Ma.nil2 a chief ,?..ccountant who · is generally kno1·m as pc~:.-rc1.clcr .:iELI".f:.§.~li,.§s, bE:Ca'!...1se he review3 ~lone ell accounts 8~d apor0ves or rejects them as he Csems r,ro::,or. 11..:) c'Jn::-::ti-i:.Ll.+:. l:S hiu1self El trihunal whose decisions aro with0~t ~ppeal, The Cons'?jo d3 Indi~s a.lone c::m ct2ngc thorn, so that this office in the hands of a man of uPscrunulous character ~o~ld indeed b8 a dangsrous one ~a~able of caus~ irig nl1lCh hnrm. Of th0 ec:lcsiastical tribunals, the p~incipal one is tha-~ of t ]:-!u A:c~11bish0p. Its jur:Lsdiction extc:nds to tho whole .:troa included in -:.n,:; 2rchbishopric. It has in 11Etnil3. a vicar scnGral {pr0viscr)J wit:1 his chief notary who, with the Archbishop, constitute the tribunal-for cases relating to ec~iosiastical affe.irs, suc:1 as rnarriac;os and otri,)r rvr'.:.r. E:,rs of puroly ecclesiastical cha~acter 2ff3cting lEym~n, as well as for civil and ecclesiastical mattsrc affecting the c~ergy &nd a:l who are subjact ta ~~s jurisdi~tion. ':1:'he c::'.erics cf ·:.he A:~chbishop .:trs nurr:.·:n~cus. T:.10::-:e occu:_::)Jing -~he first rank are the pre0.2rn~.2ries who 11 about ten per ~ent o.:!: the regu::'.ar duties. Aft9r 165[; it appeared for twelve years in the ge~e~al budget, having turnAd o Jsr 't.J tr:e tre&su:r~r, a~Yl the rece-i.jJt,s 8dCh year ra:-ig 1::d frori1 100 7 000 pesos to neerl y hD.lf q r-:.ill ion. It disappeared af~er the tariff of J670 WPnt i~to effect; but all thro~gh its history it main~2in9d its originaJ character as a spec~al fee fo~ Epe~isl Jrote~t~o~-or services rendered tc comnerce by t:1e govr~rnrran.t, eL:;hcr by tha navy, by "che court o~ by the 11;:,,:ht:house serv:.i.ce. Pl ehn, f1 Ti1.x2.ti on in in thes,e Rea.di'ws. tl18 PniJJ.n-oines, ! ,. 11 cited elsewhere -347- compose the Cabildo in the Cathedral. In this Cabildo there is a dean, an archde3con, choir-masters (chantres), director of s cl:ool, a magistral, and a doctoral. These recei.ve f1·om the K:i_nc from four hundred to six hundred pesos, whici1, v1ith the masses, obventions and chaplaincies, c:rn. 'oe j_ncrensed to about one thousand pesos a year. Aside fro~ these, there are two whole racioneros 2nd two half racicni3ros, some chaplains and other .clerics of the serrinary who serve in the Cathedral. All of these are of a s 1.1fficient number to form a continuous chair and sing in the divine offices with the majesty which one ~sually finds in the cathedrals of Sp2.i.c1. Eu~ the rir.:lat and other discomforts of this country serve to uake the celebratiori and the singing here lE::ss solemn than in other countri-es. The numb sr o:i:' cu!'a.t es of the Archbishopric is about one hundred of whoL some are seculars nnd others, regulars. T;1e seculars are entirel:r subject to the Archbis~op. The regulars are subjGct only in so far as it relates to the e.dminj.stration of souls e.nd that only in their capacity e.s curates, for in respect to their lives and habits they come undor the authority of their provincials. Besides these c1erics, there are several others, chaplains and clerics at large or who serve as coadjutors in the towns. All of these are subject to the Archbisho~ as well ns tho royal chaplains, for ths .Archbisr~op holds the rank of lieut en::1nt of the vicar &; ene:c::d of ti1e royal army. The Commissary of t,he Holy Inquisition was es tablished in Manila since the days of the conquest. The Tribunal of the.Holy Crusade (Tribunal de ,.., . ' .is 1 a wta ~ r, vruza ct'· a J is cornpos2c1' of a comrn:::_trnar:', :.'I.no an ecclesiastic, the dean of the Royal Audiencia, and the Fiscpl of the Exchequer. There is a treasurer who. keeps the bulls of-the Holy Crusade, and who forwards them to tte alcaldes rrayores. The latter in turn dist,ribute them to the curates, v-Jho finally dispose of them. Ti1e pro-: eeds a::-e reGitted to the aJ.calJP,s ma,rorc,s -who in turn for,vn.rd t.hG same to the '1 re2surer. ·- 'i he buJ.l of the Crusado 1s a summary of indulgences end other privileges granted by the Pope to him who offers an alm, which in the Philippines amounts to tt:o reeles per bull, the latter be1 1 -348- inE; 1300 d for two years. The proceeds from the bulls are small, because the Indians, who do not understand their effects, take no interest in them. The amount raisec: from this source is t>ent to Spain and added to the general treasury to be spent in the war against infidels. In order to get an idea o~ how far the incorrt'e of ManiJ.a has incn:iase,1, it is necessary to note what the Franciscan history says on this matter: "The fixed sources of revenues of the Royal Treasury of Manila are as folJ.ows: rnedias-anatas,4 messada.s, purchasable and rented posit ions, ( officios rendidos y arrendDdos), ba12n.c es of accounts, rents, incidental sou~ces, vacant bishoprics and prebendariss (if there are any) ~icenses and tributes of Sangl eys, triQut es of vagabonds, stamped paper,- almojarifazgos,) anchora..ge dues, indultos. The income from these sou.rc9s, according to the last report, is 176,293 pesos annu2ll7. To this sum should be added. the real situado arnov.nting to 62,385 pesos a year, and the ecslesiastical stipends which annually amoun"'.:- to 19,457. AlJ. of these items amount to 25S,134 pesos. ,The wine monopoly has been created lately (173l.J as a source of revenue. The income from this source raises the revenue of the Royal Treasury to 27b, 137 pesos available for ordinary expenses.n In this statement does not appear what is collected in the provinces where, at prese:1t, the income of the t:ribuna1s alon8 is over JCO, 000 pesos and where the wine industry under ~oyal atmi4 - The fees paid u,on entering up0n any secular employment or eccle.siastical benefice amoun~:~np· to the 11E'.lf of what it produces ::n the first year. Qi'~cionar5:.9._E~12.afiol~ Ingles, Lopez-Bersley, Paris, 1891. 5 - An ad valorem duty on both irupo:cts and exports, established for all Spanish color:ies by ti1e 1 aws of tho Indies •. This duty was applied to the Philip)ines soon after t~e establishment here of Spanish rule. (See ?lehn, 9.J?.• cit.) -349- nistration produces JOO,OOO pesos as con~ared to 20 ,OOO pesos w:-dch represented the income fror;1 this source in the fo1~n1 of lease rent. ThA inco:;ie from tobacco will at least be 250,000 pesos; that of betel nut, JOtOOO peso:-;; and that of co~\pits, 20,000 pesos. These 1i5.J.J.rcs do n(Jt r8present the amount collected during the 11·.'ar which T1as much bi:;r;er, but rather the estimate o? the ir:co:ne from th8so s::mrc es in the futu:r0 •. If the reverrnes are Dro·oerl v administered, the trear3ttry C,'.::i.n -cou:r.t Oi.1 one miJ.li011 pesos a year. The tob-c:,cco mono9oly is undor a director, an accountant, a f8ctor-&d~inistrator, and ~ treasurer, who are the princi,al officials. There are otter subo:cd::.nates who atte:1d to the ::;at:,hering and mnnufacture of the tobacco, which is done in the old parrochial house of Bi~onao. There is an infinity o~ women who dai~y go to the estanco to manu.factt:'re cigars. T~iey rec(~ive et cer·0ain ariiount for everJ c,ne hu.ndr1ad c ig.:u·c ~ :1at th8y ma:<o, ::i.nd she who turns out the ~n0E;t getr;; mo.ce money. This is tl1e cause of the poor quality of the work. T~0 Indians buy cantraba~d totac~o, notwithstanjing th3 fact h +• o f :)oor q·...1a_;_1ty br.a 0:;.. l'11:i;t1er • , t 11av 1"t 1s :'.).c::i.ce, Jus t "to enjoy "::.:C1e s1t:_sfac+,ion anc. C'.11·:.os:::..t.7 of rolling the cigars t.hems elves. Tnis is not J;he onJ_J extor-· tion they suffer from. The t0b2cco tl2t f~nally reaches them is generally p'J.trid, and, 2,t th2t, they can not obtain it exc9pt at an e:~rbit2nt price.. To 11.nderstand the frauds co:nLlitted in connection with thi3 industry, let us note t~w the monopolr is undertaken, 7 • ' n 0 • The raising of toba~co is perrui~ted only in the town of G.9:9ang, in c ertc::d.n tovms o:':' B1-lJ.[' can rmd in Cagayan. The Indicns are unjer contrast to d8liver the crop at such a low price that r.o :ndian would plant tob,g_cco L: it were not fo:".' the fAct that he expects to retain SEYT3ptitio11sly part of the 1 ..;nr· 1 cro .r1:i • O+-T,J~thc:,t,,nr t1.c,.::, i-l7,'0I --·Ja~1.i·,c,rc:, J. :.J_...._ __ ... .i.l·_, f'r•·:>1.1• -~. u' u .. l~.,,. }}-- ,., 0 gain so li~tle th~t it ia 2dvis1bJe ~o for~id them to r.3.i2e any plant o't,~1er t 11,,r. t•Jt2cco, as otherw:::_se, the crcp would bo Sf11c3.ll-, ':::'nis is dua 0ithr;:i.~ to the fact ttat the Indians who m0ke the contrac~ to deliver the crop are n0t the plante1s therrselves, or that the Spania::.~ctc: ,,.J~io are commissioned to 1:1.&ke the contract intirddate the Indians and -::ompel them to sign what they vv,,mt. After the harvest the commisN' 1 V V\l ..L .i!U J{_. C...: 1.__, -350- sioner assignej to receive the crop cl2ssified as second clnss t:1ose o.f the .-::'irst clas3, an.J the3e .6re sold to the :~ing as first class to,J2.cco. As therr; are six different grac~f;c, this o:::'fici.al m.J.kes a good profit frofil this fr8ud, ~heating the Indians of enormous amount. Hovevs~, hg tries to silence 'O'T "1'"' ·,~erf'e~·'-l ·y:· •:,r.cep'f-,_,l-,lp t 1 ,o"'e t l,.·em li. J r-"'coi"H-i·,1··• Ci.0 .) ...._ Which by reason po\r QUJ~' ~-t y shou}_d be C:ODSigne d to the flames. But +, ite un?ortune.te Inclian is, in the end, _the one viho vi}. . 11 pay fo:;_" i·1:;, for :;_t; is he who will finally receive the poo: qua:ity tobacco, as everybodv, exGeDt the ooor Indian, nay cJ--,oose tr:e ,::if ar t hst he b·J_ys. 'ln the fe ct)ry the best kinds ~re s0lectsd as a gift t0 the 3overnor, the auditors, the assessor, and other ind~vidJnls who Esual:y receive :.,orne q1..:..an~ity 3.S Ctristrtas gj_ft;:,. The o-v-erseers ( ca:r,ataces) al.so make +:.heir choice and +:.ney make son1.e ve:~·y .fi:--i("" ci:,;ars ,i:n:Lch are bought by tLose t.'ho cdn af_:ord -~o pa/ the ::i:cice, v1rdch ordinaril r ::i_s five Desos rnore thun the 0:.O7ernment pr:J.ce • ., In the factory ::_t.self sel3ct-·cigars are also sold, altbou~h tisse are no~ as ~ood as those 4::- hB.t sorie froLi ,:::,nr:: ove::-seer3. T1e cig;ars thus selected are reserved fer Su2ni3r{s 1 R~d the rest are sent to the pro-.fj_nces, - Bu-c l1er1 the fraud does not end. 1here is in ea~~ province an administrator, and this S9lcct3 t.'r:e !>Jst c~_itc:,rs, (, ei·.;.....,_"her 1..C>o.,., V'.i" s J.l. -P~i· ~--1 :tQ • -P ,_:,811 -~ no, J. H -~"-G'-;', o ,...,__ in .,ne ~~d-)~J8 0-'-... ..Ls--b them at a higher price) and for·Jarcis the ::.~r:::.:,t of the fi3:L.s.~c§_, wt.er-a the Sc'.,rne f:caudulent 1Jr0ce:::~11re is folJ.owsd, only on a larger scalG, for it is gener2.lly understood t:1at he~ who v·nmts to ha·:e ths 1:;rLrJ_J_ege o.: n::ak:.ng his ow~1. choice mJ.v do so a.nri rets sixteen C; '2'ar"' :PoY' C>r'e .L I,.., ·c· i",-: c ,., .. -,_, r-,-,_7 -;r. -:-- 1-,r-> ._..l.1-Ul...,.•-.,, poorest kin~s are ~ef~, 1nd these ara soli at ~he • _.__ ( +•-, '"h tciga::'.' s1.,orAs esvan.::pLL.1..os jI &-c e, _ e ra,,s o.,:., :,:;eventeen cigars fo:c one re2l. Very often the su;iply is :i..iriit-:d and in this case th-3 sstJnqt1_ill2ros} V V V ...1-..., of J•-'-'· ·J~ \.~~ -J(..\.r-., ..._. V ..__ 0 0 -I-~ -'·~ ( StOY'P - .J . U ..._ - 1. k'Clc,-~Je .t ., , " ' ) - -....., .__, .L "-' .1. ' ~-S '-• 7 "(::<C" ,,,C,l,,_f_ -'-? __,_ -·· I V C" 1 IV . ..\., .1,.:. ti-,-"' s+,---,·:·0 0 . .1. "-' ·- ·..,,1 .i.. _. ,,1c,·.-.c, V\ - J. .J '...J t'1,c,-:-,c, r_ .i.. _; _ !, ·._.. 1 · ' - ..., -r-·c,ise U. __ .'. t:be :::,rice i:.lDd 11"J.a),e irnr::erse pr:,f~.t2. 'i'he 3:.>re '.Jr2ctices 2.re followed in conn,:;cti():-1 "'it;ith the m0no1Jol v of 1:vine and of betel L,ut. The p:rivi::.~ge of rui\nii'.ie: a cockpit is leased and nets 20:COJ pesos a year. His t:ajest:" ordered that these imposts be rer1,oved 2nd the -'::,r:i_bu-:::,e of the Inc;.i&ns dou_i)lecl; but "- o s e ,.,"1"ose 1-. • _,_ · ,,:ere a f'f ec\,;eG. ' ' 3;ave tne · · t 11 in,,eres·c in- -351- formation that the Indians preferred to have those pJ1bels to ·paying double the tribute. But I know V·Jhat they would '\'Jillingly pay even triple the tribute just to be :L. . . ee frorr the ext:.ort ions they are made to suffer. By this I do not mean to say that the tax be rBpealed, but that it be placed where it could not givs rise to so many frauds. In the first pla::: e it is r:ec2s.:::.:ar y to pay to the ple.nt er more than wliat is offered ritrn, and to sell the articles at cheap,~r pric os so tr:.9.t smug,7,lers vwuld fir:.d '-..mprofitable tte smug·~ling traffic~ If, in. ad~_ition to this, the :i:r.eu,:h, peTpetu::i.t,ed on the public be stoppe~, the income would increase rather than decrease, as it -;rnuld be possj_bl~ to reduce the personneJ. a"l.d s.s.ve the Boney tLat is p3icl. as salaries to cen who are i;ood for nothing: except to cause so m;_ich damufe .- Unde:;:' this sys'::,efa there would be no 12.ck, e.s at presci1t, of wlne, tobacco and "'.Jetel nut, and th3 con~rc,ba:1d business would diminish.. J;Jforeover ·0he 'Jub=_ic ,,,ou.ld r., e better •, · • , -( · , b· e rEnse · ct • _serve d V·I .1--.ii~e the :_ncorne c.·r·· .,__·Jue 1.::_ng w,JU-!..CL . Of t h8 Obras P:Las :Ln I,Ic1rdl& the c Lisf one is that of La Miserico:::·c:i:1> the 111sn}oers of ~Jhich are sofue of the uost distirrz~isi0~ cit~zE~s. It has a purveyor {µroveedor) ?:r,c1 tT:J2lve depu~i0.s, who are appoin~e& every year to a~mi~iste~ the Obra Pia and the College of Sant.:1 Isn.oel, \-vhic,-s 11.1as founded by it. This confraternity ~as founded 1s or the 16+;., of' Anri·, J c:c4 ,,..;·1- 11 +-1--,p f,1na 0 7 7 ect1- ._, -~.-.. e d bJ & virtuous cleric: froP'l the citizens ol EaniJ.a; theieafter the income has been continually aegmented with pious legacies left by some fri&rs fer different wor:rn of charity. · ... ... V .!. J. .J... i_ ' .:,. - - / / ) i.,~ .J_ ·J .L 0 V V ..l..-- The capital was invested speculativel;/ in the Acapu2-co g'.1l1eon, in t:1'.:e vessels that s2i~_ad to China or J3v::-. a.:1d to tLe ~oc:~st, c.nc:'. t:18ce 78Ltures were so profitajle that, bssi~es incra~si~J the cat-h~ ""'u·n·, o·,c- ,. .,.· ·~ '"',·,,r"·. . ~ E,\ l ':)_ ~; ,r ec,,J. -::,--. p .;,ta1 ~~ _J ·v--11.,cJ E.~ ei'cr charitable purros2s. ?,=1tt e2ncd 3.i~- er ,~:1j_s P~Lous \Jork were several others est.c1.tli.c_;:wr:::. -i_n the convents, in the con~raternities·and in tns Tar~iary orders (Ordenes Terceras ~, '-:,he adm:;.nisti'ritirrn of which was in the hands of ~he tartiary brethren, or of the re- • • A- 1 1 • ] • • • ~igious. hl or" tnem are p~ous _egacies wnicn are -· _,._ ' _ ,:; - -'- ( ._I ) I._ V '-, L. J C.~ •' ' " ~ ~-·· ~-! \ '~-~- ._,' ,)' 1 -352- destined for hospitals, for marriages of orphans, for the redemption of children in China, and for the suffrage of the souls of the founders. The seculars believe that the religious have obtained immense we3.lth with those li!fontes de Piedad, but it ban be shown to the whole world by the books that the purposes as desired by the founders have been fulfilled, and "chat the regu~ars are disinterested enough to refuse to accept 5;; for the 1,wrk of administration •. Of the Obras Pias de San Agustin I can speak with authority' for, having been provincial Secretary, I saw &nd audited the books of the Obras Pias and I know that the c:onve:rit only receives what is destined for the st~f.frages. This is perfectly reasona'.Jle, for if the rsligious take pains to sing in the choir in order ti1at their prayers may serve to relieve the sufferings of souls in purgatory, it is onl~ just that they eat of the alms in the refectory. The pious works are of much uti2_ity to Spaniards who come to the Philippines, for, as long as they have somebody to stand as bond for them, even if they have no capital, t11ey a.re sure of getting funds from the Montes de Piec.ad, paying so much percentage, according to the profits th.at the times provide •. In the commercial ventures the rates usually are exorbitant; in the Acapulco galleon oftentimes·an interest of 50% is paid; in the Chinese "':.rade it goes _up to 20~~, and in t.he conmerce with tr~e Coast 2570 o But t :1e merchants gain much e..nd the pious works increase .rapidly thei~ income. At tim.es, however, the interest goes down to 22%, in the Acapulco trade, and proportionateiy in the others. Then, in view of the, risks, 2nd vessels get lost, no galleon sails for Nueva &spaJa and the Obra Pia will not invest all its capL~:'d, hardly 5% of it being investe1 from year to year. ~ examined the ac~ounta of the Oo.r&s ?iss of the province of San Agustin from 17/i.4 to :1.',i94, c1nd I found that in fifty years only 5~.; df the principal was each year invested. -353- { 2) The Provinces and their Population at the Close of the 13th Century.l The Archbishopric of I-Ianila, the most dense- ly populated region in the Ptilip~in0s, includes nine provi:1.ces. Four of t.he.ss a.re south of Manila, and they are Cavite, JatangRs. M~ndoro and Laguna de Bay. Tbe p:;:·ovinces o::-I:t..:.iacun, Pc..rnpanga, ~Bo.ta.an and Zar:1ba.leR are r:..orth of Ms.nila. The ninth province is Tonda, ~hsre Manila itself is ioca~ed. '.l'he nun:ber of tr:.bu-'c.es in -'chese provinces is 86,243, where?s in the year 1735 ~here ~ere only 37i403. ~~e nun·1hP~ of t-ibu~~s· corrr"·on~?~-7 ....v _P·yea~ •ll '.,./--.,.. .,__ ....,._,, _ .,b_-~.:.J. ...... .l..1..1..::) ~o _, • , ' t' . . .... ,. ... . . 173 k) inc.1 uues .,;ie rr.em:.izo ~rJ.o J.,Jc:.:ries; :.c1 t"ne n..imber I furn~sh only t~e Indians are included. It to the la-'.:-,ter 10,512 riestizo tr:.bute p2yers fo'J.nd in tl1is Archbishopric be added, tte ::1.urnbe:c v:ould be 9S,754, which is dou:)le the r~umoer of tri;J'..ltes which the king recei7ec. seventy years ago. To each whole tribute s:·10uld be assigned five persons, so that, with the fore.5 o:.Lg number of t:"'.'ibu::.es v·ie get about half a m.iJ_lion c:~s th(0 sizr, of "':,he no·,:..J.lation. It is to oe nc·~ed that the Spaniards rio not; figure in this reckoning, as do -1:,he Ind~.e.ns of IVIa::i.j_la nnd Cavite, w.ho a.re subject to the tribute, but who, nevertheless, do not pay. :in t'.1e OiX':.~:_eyin,,:;; districts of these two ~ities thsro ara so many people who can no·;:; be registered. If a:.J the,3e w-ere includE:d} the popula-'sion of th3 Arch-Jishopric of Manila would exc:eE..d half a million~ ...J n- .J. The foll·owi_nir t2ble shows the number of Indians and l'-Icst:Lzo tritute pay-ers in ·;::,ho p:covinces of the Archbis:nopric of ;JI.qnila, toge-~her with the value of the tr::..br:.te that they pay to the King. 1 - J:f...artinez de Zuniga, 2.P..• cit. -354- -Tribute Pay- Provinces Tribute Payers - Indians Tondo Cavite Laguna Batangas Mindoro Bulacan Pampanga 14,537 1/2 •• •• •• .•• • •• Bataan Zambales •• Value of ers - Mestizos •' the Tributes •• ••.. 5, 721.J- 1/2 14,392 1/2 15,014 1/2 •• : 27 ,897-7-3 859 " • ' ' 9, 132-4 II 19, 448-6 II 336 " 1+51 ;r t 21, 579-7~3 2,007 " 16,604 1/2 2,841 ii •• 619 n , 73 il 3,082 II 1,136 Ii : .. -.•10,517 1/2 -j TO TA L • 16,566 1/2 • . •••• " 3 1/2 3,105 1/2 I :c:= 3,528 90,243 f1 • •' •• •• 4,000-8 II 25, 760-5 II 27,358-1 11 5,433 II II 4,389 ii II •• •• 144, 990-6-6 •• -- The provinces of Ilocos, Pangasinan and Cagayan comprise the Bishopric of Nuova Segovia. There are in these provin~es 75,297 tributes, Indians and Mestizos, rcprescntih 6 a population of 379,500 souls, From this can be seen what I have pointed out elsewhere that the whole tribute, wilich is represented as consisting of two persons, should be considered as representing a little less than five individuals. So in determining the population of a certain province, I always multiply the number of tributes by five and from the result I deduct a certain number to make allowance for the fact that the whole tribute is not exactly equivalent to five individuals. The spiritual administration of the people in this Bishopric is in the hands of Agustiniansi Dami- -355- nicans, and Indian clerics as follows: The Agustinian fathers administer·l91,264 souls; the Dominicans, 139,263 couls; and the Indian clerics, 48,973 souls. Of thri number of heathens ( infiolcs) no aceurate information is obtained; Dorr,e exaggerate the number, while other::; greatly roduce it. The followin~ table shows tLe tributes, (Indians and Mestizos 1, of the Bishopric of Ilocos, to- gether with the amount thciy pay to the King. Tribute Pay- •.. errJ Indians •• Provinces - -- - Trib,.1t e Pay- :Value of the 'l 1·lbutc er:J - Mostizos 1 Ilocos 41-1-, 852 1/2 631 Pangasinan 19,dJ6 1/2 719 1/2 Cagayan .. 9,888 1 71+,577 • ••• •••• ===================·.. =---:='-.. TO '1 AL ••• : , ----- 1, .350 1/2 =-=-====================:..==--=--=·=· - 68,857 7 25,366 11,2h4 6, 6 ~..=:----.. -::: 10 5 , 467 6 , 6 • ---==-~--=== The province~ that constitute tho B:i.s.h.opric of Camarines are Camarir.es, Al bay and T:iyab::i.n, In the year 1735, the:; whole region had 15,177 tr::i.butes, but now, it has 39,734. The following table shows the population and the value of tribute in the provinc os of this B:.shop:d.c: -356- -----·-----·-----·-----·---------Value of the Provincos Tribu'.~ e Pay-- : Tribu:~ e Pay: ers - Indians :ors . . rn ;StlZO[~! Tribute ----------------------------1 19, 6[:56 1/2 Camarines Taya.bas 7,396 12 ~, 3 ,, (.) 146 ]. 2 Albay 15\ 1i2 .)., •• . 29, 991+, 3 9,283, 7 16,093, 3' 9 . ------::;:::=======~===~-::.:::=----====;===:::-=-=:::-=~-=---= ' , 39,421 1/2 , 55,375, 13, 9. . ====================-=::::·::.···= -----==--·-·-·-=---=--== TO'i'AL , •••• 312 1 /2 The Bisho1:Jric of Cehu is the most extensive of all in the Phillppinos for it includes all the provinces of the Pinta~os or Visayas, It is one of the three suffragan bishoprics which Pope Clement VIII by hi.s brief of kwust l/1., 1596 creutect,2 'fhe provinces and districts include1 within the juric~iction of this birhopric .:~re the provinces of Cr?bu, Leyt e, Samar, Iloilo, Capiz, lntigue, Calamiunos anJ Carufa, the Corrigimianto of Misumis or Ilir~n, ~he Jobierno de Zamo6anga, the Corrir!:imi:mto or' th:J ::::sland of Negros, and the Gobierno of the MarianaG IsJ.uriC::s. Trwru nre in this region 95, ~2f: tributes, inc:i_uding Indians and. l\ifor-:t,izos, representing a popuL1tion of a·:)Out llalf a n:iJ.li.on souls. ThGse people sciitterod in n1any is• lands and provinces are adrr:.inistc~red~ E pi ..'o.tuaJ_ly by Indian clerics and Agustinians, Fran~i1::cans and I~Pcollects. 1 The following tabl<3 shows the population of the different provinces of this Bishopric together with the amount of tribute that the people pay to the Kinp;: 2 - Th8 two other bishoprics created at the same timr arc Nueva Segovia and Nucva Cuccres. -357- Tribute Pay~, ers ·- Ind:L:, ns Provinces -- T:cibuto Pay- • Valuo of the TrjbutG iVIestizos; ers 20,812 1/2 Cebu •• Samar 3,042 Leyte 7,678 Caraga 3,497 Misamis 1,278 Isla de Negros 5,741 Iloilo .• Capiz Antique Calamianes •• I - 28,863 625 •• •• 103 39 1/2 ••• ••• •• •• ••• •• , • •• •• •• , • 4,060 10,011 J.,.,977 1,674 7,176 29,723 166 11, li-59 89 14,867 9,288 ••• 11,610 ••• 3,161 2,289 . ·• 37,760 ===*lilr.====-==========:-=-=-====~==-=· = ~-=======-= • • TO'I'AL , . , 124,159 1,020 1/2 94,807 l/2 .... . G . (3) Social Life - Iv.Tanners and Customs. 1 · The inhabitants of this province (Batc1.ngas) are Indians. 'l'here are also found here :rnr;io Chinese mestizos, Japanese and Spaniards, all of whom arc quite lighter in complexion than the Indians and of better features except with respect to the eyes which -·-----1 - This is from the seventh chapter, volume one of Zuniga 1 s Estadismo. It deals with the province of Batangas and its people. -358- among the Chinese mestizos, are uc;ly and very small, as if E:owed on the sides like button-holes. The Indians have big eyes, which are black and beautiful, but in other respects they arc ugly, their co. th.u t o.f an o~ive ~ . ·: , quince-vree . t ] _or b eing or o_f' a. b a~ea fruit, the nose being flat and their hair black. The stature is regular, ·out t h2rG a r.e many of them that are well-formed. The ·vJOmen in particular have such beautiful forms thElt some might serve as models to the best carvers. These Indians belong to the 'raga1 o g r a c e , whi c h, it is b el i e:w e d, c ume from .fv'fal a c c a , and which undo1.1·otedly passed from here on to Borney, and from Borney to the Philippine Islands, to the river of Manila, (for which reason they caJ.l themsel ':es Tagalogs \ wor_d which in their langu:1go mGans a rivor dweller}, From the latter place they spread around the Laguna de Bay a,s far as this province of Batangas. The houses are made of bamboo, although some are of wood, and they are sufficiently commodious. To build them, th8y general:;_y drive into the ground six posts, and place over them a roof of' bar1boo. They then cover the roof with cogon which grows in abundance in the fields. ':'he structure is of sufficient durability and prov:5_des a good pro·~ fiction from the rnins, even in the season of tte rnost furious typhoons. Iv:idvJny- between t.he :·~·oof and the ground they build a f~oor of bamboo O}:' board according to the means of the owno~. The sides are covered with .bourds or a trollis of bo.rnboo, over which cogon is placed, Soaces on tho sidGs are always left for windows of the hciuse. In this way a square is forrnad vJhicb the:r divide .into a t3r,1all sala and a small bedroom. The latter· is trnud to keep their b elongingn o.nct all that rnir;ht o.~·rcnd the sight of those that enter the house, :'.::n :1nothe:i:> build ... ing, attached to the hous,~, is the k.L·:::,cben. Attached also to the ki.t ch:m is anothe ::· flo:Jr of bamboo which they call bataJ.an. Here t, hey dry their plates, W,.lSh their clothes .snd take their l)aths. The dress of tlw men consists of a Ci'.:l,J'!}is§:., which reaches a little below tho waist, and vJhich they wear loose over wide trousers after the fashion of the water vendors of Valencia. The trousers are -359- ah·rnys blue or red; the camisa may bG of any color except green, which is never usod, Around the waist they have a cord which sGrves as a b0lt and from which they suspend a machete :1 call. ed by them guloc. Around the nock they woa.r a rosnry of gold, a ch.s.in, or a ccapulary of Gur Lady c:l.Gl Cni'n:en. On the head they wrap a piece of cloth in the for~ of a turban, or wear a hJ.t of palm or of IU:t.Q.. Tho principales usually wear, in addition, a jacket, and many of them, on feo.st:. days, drGss therns el vcs in Span5.sh fashion. The wouer;_ USE) a cPmisa which reaches to the waist, and which is provided with white sleeves. For a skirt t>iey have a I:;:l.Q.YB, whici1 is similar to th'3 Spanish sayu. Over 1;l.w saJcl thc3y wear a tg!_i§., a loni::; cloth which they wrap ari:rnnd tho lowur part of the body. For he&ddress they wear a piec8 o.f cloth in turban fashion, bat for church attend2nce, they wear a headcover of black in the manner of the Spanish mantilla. Both ruen and women go unshed and only outside of the house do tb8y use chinelas. These chinelas usuall:.r are urr1broidered with silver and gold. Moreo7e:c, they -woar rosaries, chains, scapula~~es, bracelets, rings 2nd pendants of gold, with rrr.1ch extravagD.ncee In eating, tlJ.G:r sit neit~er on chairs, as the Spaniards do, nor on the floor, as dJ the Turks. mh " l .. tJao_ · 7. . es a r ew ii1crles /Ufh, 1 • • 1 ey h ave smaL ,,,na, sea t 1 (·d ·1· r' c:;a ,sq t.-la ·"'t·l---i1-ig -nos·turc, c,.nro·:.1n·--·c..... tl.-.pc•:, e"'·t v ...._ . ~- JJ . 11 ..,, e:, -1·· 1-yo· l.j"' '.. men <;(nd womEn tog etlwr. Some :::::..mcs :.:tJ..l e.J.'~ from a C')rnmon pJ.ate, bu.t on othe1., o--:cesion? e'.lG.'1 tas a separate platter, tho n:oL~'.?.i-}l_e-~Ji c1lono? w i:~ch is -b· eJ.n::.:, -· n- •. •. . · ,_. b o ...,.... ,, ·,;,.,. r,• ::_:h;. '.>J'.'7 r.. a corr.xLon b r P~a. d ·t o t-Jnem, ,,:.-.,rJ. son gets vJhat he need::..: from this bow:'.., layE:: it on his own !)::.atter containing his viand..3 -which they ,1. .,• :,c• c1l,J. i,\)_-it-' }-i f'·"inre.,., -Y'·' ~ r.r,.(1 1·.IUr;,, :;rri·n u... Cal . -:-1 b.....@, _niixe,., __ __,n 1--~. .• eating, ur:3::;__ng no other utc;nsils tE&n h:.i s onrc n:.u.td. The ordinary food of thj_s ~H::opl0 is tLo ,no:;_•:l.squoto. .+ 1 . t-J..c q'.lt,GlGJ_•:,y o f'. .s."1.1-.:, seasoned.. ',Jl. t h a ~.it l.ne 9r::1.n-, ,6 U0Uc... ,., ~11,y 1-18.VG .J.n : -J-l 't·" ~ ,·!· .p ' , 8r,,'"c1. pa..,_e.._, .3.C,uJ. lOD c., C-,_, ...... ,,.,.,_. O~ sv taoles boiJ.ed in water with salt, bu.·:.:, \l'dt;_1out lal'd. Sometimes they ;1a_ve beef, buffalo, dd.ed VGrd.son or bagoong. The latter is made from fish he2vily seasoned ~ith salt and prepared in a m~nner verf disagreeable to one not accustomed to eating it. On big occasions they kill cows, pi~s, and fowls, n / .• J. 1 .J • v J 1 J ., 1.J .. i. ,J -~ , 1 r• C, J • J r1] • 7 -360- and eat extra-ordinarily. Their food is on the wrwle a l:ittle nourishment because to the morisqueta no ingred:Ler..t of any kind is added. It is so tasteless that the Indians themselves find it unpalatubl e unless it is rrdJCed, as j_t i.[~ ord:.:.nari~y clone, with sal-s, some fl'"J.it, or boiled corn. But with this frugal food they enjoy good health and they live for several years. Marr:La!?:cs are celebrated accord:~na: to the Catholic rit~s, but-ln the preparatory ~rrungemonts there are many pcrtic~lars that are worthy of note. To got marr:i_ed, they do not generally think of pro--'viding a horr.e for ti1eir family. As lornI as th·JY have suffi~ient me.1ns for tr.e expens er, of -':.he wedding, which do not amount much if no guests .s.re invited, they get married wlth no thou~ht of what the next day may bring for+.;h. The parents thornselves donit ssriously take this ffiat~er into consideration but mere:;_y say 1tbahal2 na 11 (God ·will take care). But tao gir~' s parents never ctispense wi~h the cervices of their son-in-law before ths end of three, four or I11Qr0 yea.rs. lJ:.1r:.ng this period of time they make him serve them and to help them in various ways. Among the wel:;_-to-do families it is customary for the bridegroom to furnish a dowry, which is of two kinds: one is called bieny~2, whi·ch is given to t:,he mothur for nur;d.ng· Llw cia"'..lght er. Tn:!.s is now rarely done, The o-Lh er kind which is the r~al dowry is called }2_ii:;r~I.£QVfl:., which is dest ineci for the mr,in-s e1;a.nc:e of the young people after marriacr,c, alfjhoug:.1 Dt tii:1es almost all c.f it is sper:i.t in t h1:1 wedding o Horeover, the dowry is asked out of vanity juct to enable ths parents to boast that thsir child has bcc~1 bought with a gooc~ pric c. 'I'he nge a~ -which gj_ r1s cornmonJ.y ma:;:-"r:· in this province is from twelvo to fifteen and the boys from fourteen to sevente0n. Burials arc m~dc in the church or i:i:1 the cemetery, in accord.an~e with the rites of t}H,1 church, at 0xr enses corresponding to t hei.r stt.>ndin;:. Those who p.sy the fees fixed by a schedule v;hich has been approved by the Archbishop c::1.nd the RoJ.sl Audiend.a are entitled to the funerals thJt th0y desire, but those that do not pay the fees 1w.ve J.ess pompous -361- funerals, without the singing of the prayers that usually are sung at burialH. This is so because if all were trentE?d alike nobody would pay, and the mini~ters would find ttemselves without sustenance, All the relatives of the deceased assemble, at the lattbr 1 s house, and, between sobs, recite the various incidents in life of the debd. After the buric,l, on the fourth day, they assemble again in ·the same house and say the rosary. They pass there the whole night of .thEit day. They le2ve a vacant seat on the table in the belief th,-:;t on that day the soul of tho dead would occupy it. To convince themselves of this, they would scatter ashes around the house, exr-,ecting the next morning to find footprints of the dend. This superstition has be.er1 abandoned by the Indians, just as several others, they had in the past. But several have still remained, some of which are very prejudicial, judging from what the Pr2ctian d8l Ministeri0, Chapter I, paragraph 5, says in this connection. But I wish to state that in this province and in the nd.ghborhood of Manila many of those have be!;n aoandonGd. "Many are the abuses, or, as thGy s.~tY, ~3.le.§., which the natives have·contrary to our Holy faith and good customs, and among tn:Jm are the following. There is first of aJ1 the idoliitry of the f_Q_llQ.§.• In regard to this, it should be noted that the word nono do2.s not only .r,ignify grandfather, but th:1t it also 1-wed as a term of respect co the old and. the genii. The Indians refer to these noLos, just as the Chinase do by the word n.12irit,.n, and the Homans by the nc1me gods. With theS'.3 nonos or gonii thl:; Indians frequently practice many idolatries, as for example, askinst them for favors, ,1.ssistanco, help and that they do them no hnrm, nor be enoiniE.:S to them, etc. On mc,ny occasions they m.1kr£; such requ r~sts, and among others aro the fallowing, Hhen they wish to pluck any flower or fruit, they ask permission of the genius or none to pluck it. When they traverse any field, river, creek, big trees, groves and other places, they ask for the good favors of the riono. \'.Jhen they are obliged to cut a11y tree, they ask p~rdon of the nonos, and e~cuse themselves to those things by saying, among other things, that Padre ordered them to do it, and th1t it was -3 62-not their o~n purpose to fnil in their respect to the 11enii, etc, When th0y frJll ill witi1 whnt they call panave, which they attribute to the genii or nonos, thev ask them for health and offer them food. All of these they d~ on this as on other occa3ions, in the fields, groves, ri··1e1·s, nt the foot of some big tree, suc;.1 as the caJ.:trma.n, and in various other plclCGS. This kind ofidolbtr:r is fixed and rooted among the Indians. For this reason it is necessary for the .father minis-Sers ·!·;,o be VC!ry carefu~. and makG great efforts to extirpot :::: it. ~ I "In the second place, the Indians generally believe that the sou] tJ of the dead visit their hou- · sea on the thi:cd d<:ty after thej_r death, :i.11 order to visit the people, or attend the banquet, and to take part in th.8 ceremony of the t i.b[;o. The lat t r:n~ thJy alwuys hide and conceal --::-~vsaying that thoy assemble j_n the house of t:1e de.c0.used for purposes of .s.3.ying the rosary cm his behalf. If they ere told t.o do their prayini in tht; church, they i~efu.se to comply for that is not re,,;.lly vJhat they -,l'Jish to do. Fo-r this rsason the ndnister should prevent thorn from gathering in the house of the deceased af~er the burial under whatever pretext, lc~r:tst. of all on the third day. On the fourt:i1 d.oy, in c0nnectior1 with the~ CE::remony of the tibaQ, they li§(1t, crmr:lles and await the soul of the dead. ThBy sprced a mat and Ecatter ashes over it, so that the tr3cl~ or f'oototeps of the soul may be irrmres.sc:d tl1(:Jrcon, and by that means ascertcdn -whether: th,J ::,cul cr.,.n_;_e U}' not. Th9y also set a dish of water at thR'door, so that when the soul comes it ln8f was:1 its .f cet t,lwre. It is not saying too much to ::;tnt e t, hcit t )tG s e tliings of the genii and nonos and soul2 of the dund, the Indians obtained from the Chinese und thAt they require effective remedy. , '''rhe Tir~hal anr;,, which sornr-; call a. ghost and others n goblin, ap)ears to b0 the ~cnius rir devil that appears them in the form of a black aan, or of an old man, or, as they thcm.seJ.ves say, in thG form of a very small old man, or in the form of a horse · r;i, ' ' 1 ' or o £-, a. mons-cer, .Lney:f, oar ._,,1ns o~iJ.r!g 130 mucn t l1a t trwy ar0 obl L~cci to befriend hirn, dol i vering to them their ros&riGs, and receiving from nim superstitious 1 -363- things such as hairs,,herbs, stones, and other tl-:ings, in order that they may obtain marvelous things, and tha~ they may be aided by him in certain of their affairs. "The Patiano.c, which some also call ghost, must be the genius or devil whi~h usually plays with them, as also ·with several others who 1 losing: their faith, become subject to him.. To- thin being is attributed the ill success of births, and they say that in order to harm them and cause their destruction, he hides in a tree or in any object near the house of the woman -,vho i3 ubout to ?c:ive birth, and there sings aft er the mo:m er o:: the rowers. 'ro pre~rent ti:1.c harr.i that n:ight be ccmssd by t:1e Pa·~ tianac, tho men go nuked, Etrm ·themseJ.ves with cuiress, ~ytcina, lance and other weapons, post themselves on the roof or under the house and they slash and cut right and le.ft w:ith t:1e cantana, in the manner of one enge.ged in duP.d.ly combat. Another way of avoidine the harm is to remove the woman in labor to another house. 11 They also attr:Lbute to thE! Patiana,.::, among other things, the deat,h of c hil drei1, whicI1 they nlso attribute to the AsuD.ng. They refer to this ~-n this manner. The Asuang is led by a birrt callGd Tictic to the houses of women who a:ce c1bo11t to deliver." From the roof of a r..eighboring hmrne, it stretches out its threadlike tongu,.:0;, inserts it through the anus of the child, sucks out its entrails and kills i~. Sometimes they say that the Patianac appears in the form of a dog, or of a cat, or sometimes, of a cockroach, wh~ch introduces its elf under the mat, and causes the a.'l:•() v G rhentioned harm. They also at~rioute to the Patianac the going astray of travelers. To find the way, they go naked in the belief that the Patianac fears them in that form and hence can not lead them astray. "The Bonsol, which they sometimes say is various duro,;onos caus0d by the witch ~~~~!Z:9X, and which appears on all parts of the body of tlie ·oevdtche':1. The person afflicted with this evil usually remains some moments as if dead or fainted, and at other times as though n~ad or ravin'.?; from tlie si6 ht of t·he -364- Gauay which appears to him in various shapes. To cure this evil or bew:.tchmcmt, they call another witch, who, after making various enchantments, usually leaves the person as he formerly was. Sometimes they attribute the bonsol to a natural disease or pain in the stomach caused by obstructions or protuberances which grow in stomach or in- cl nearby region, or by colds which move from one part to another, with which the women of this country genernlly arc afflicted. But when they can not c11re the sic!moss within the Gxpected time, th0y say that the affliction is bonsol, that is bewitchment, and that nobody could cure it except one who is a witch himsolf. They therefore call a witch and if this does not succeed in bringinr r9lj.ef to the patlont, he makes the excuse that th·) witch who caused the disease is far away and has not been able to hear him, and so the patient is abandoned to his pains, ttThe ceremony or supt:)rstitton of the bi1_g_g_ is made to discover a thief, It consists in p1r':iting in a bilao, sievo or crib, some scissors fixed in the shape of St. Andrew's cross, and on it they suspend a rosary. Then they repeat the name of each of t_hose who ar~::: present and who are nssembled for this, If, for e:;~amplc, wh0n the narrG of Pedro is called and the bilao wriggles, they conclude that Pedro is the thief. They also sometimes 1ight candles to San Antonio de P3dua, witt a view to discovering the thi8f, For this purpose th~y pray. If the light of the cc1ndl2 inc~_ines towe.c(l;:3 any one of those prE~S ent, for exar:1pl e, to·wards tT .10.11, then they conclude that Juan L; the thie:2. It is common among the Indians to carry on mv: 1s [Y.n,con various things to obtain marvelous rosultsJ s~ch as cedulas, writings, prayers, herbs, roots, husks, hairs, skins, eggs, pt,bblos, 'et,c., to protect them from defeat, from death, or from the toils of the Law, or to enable them to obt~in riches, women and other things. They are also m1;.ch inclin:Jd to bolievc in omens and in cla1s of ill luck. 1 "The word £.b.'1.-"1.&, which they u:3e to moan Christening, seems to havo been introduced jnto the Philippines by the Boros from Born(,:;o, Mincl2.nao, or Jolo, as was alco the word cimba, which sc:;GIJ1S to signify -365- amon~ them adoration. From this meaning they h3.ve adopted it to si/nify thcdr temples and mosques, and .the Tar~alogs too:~ it to mean not adoration but church? anrl. ~a~er used ~t to mean mass, -which was never its on_ginal 11:0an1ng. 11 "Lastly, th~ .superstitions, predictions, and errors among the lndinns are so many, that it is difficult, if not impossible, to mention thfJm all. 'l'he above have been rnerrt,j_ )nP.d so that the father ministers may exaLline others by them, It is to be noted that there are amon~ the Indians sectaries and preachers of various false faiths' especialJ.y in the distant provinces, either because they had false sects formerly and have continued them, or because they took them (and this is more likely) from the Joloans, Mindanao, 3angleyes, and othar heathen peoples with whom they usually had intercourse. 11 1 These Indians, just as I have describe'd, · are happy. Their dress is very comfortable and adapted to the climate of this land. Their houses are easy to build and are of sufficient strength to protect them from the wea.th(:)r. Their food is not ltD..'Urious, but, accustomed to it, they do not crave for other kinds., This manner of living they maintain with little effort. It is not n0cessary to dress heavily or to put on little clothing the whole day, or to gath(H~ fuel for the kitchon, or to labor daily for the sup~ort of a family. The Indian that works for a fourth part of the year can afford to remain idle for the rest of the yenr, with the assurances that the soil will yield him enough to maint~in him with decency. Separated from others, they live in barrios T7hich they call nayon, whero the vices and gamblirw find no place, because the occasions for them are lackin~. Here they neither gamble nor drin~:, bee a use the taverns and the garnblin~ places are so 1,3.r awny. In each nayon there are Six, eight or more houses. One of the residents, who inspires general respect because of his age or his descent, or because o.f his well known beneficence, is obeye;d by all, and he rnaintains the harmony of the whole vicinity. During the greater part of the yoar, when they have nothing to do, they pass the time in conversation under the shade -366- of the trees; in other words, they live in a patriarchal life. It is true they have an alcalde mayor, but this official after receiving the tribute, which is onJ.y five reales and a half, has no more dealings with them. The injustices that are related of alcaldes mayores are done to the more well-to-do and pi.. ordncmt persons with whom the alca.lde enters into cont,racts. 'rh8re is also in each tovm a gobernadorcillo. He sees to it t.hat the men perform the personal scrvicos that are assi?ned to them. In doing his work for the wsek, E1ach person is not interfered with by the rest. Disputes, a~ong them are decided by the gobernadorcillo, in accordance with their customs, and v1ith the assistance 9f two old men who act as assessors. They ?enerally obeyed the sentence and rare are the cases that are appealed in this provinc~ to the court of the alcalde mayor. -367- PART FOUR POLITICAL, ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL PROGRESS, 1800-1872 CHAPTER ON.E PHILIPPINE HEPRESEN'fi\/l'ION IN THg SPANISH CORTES 1. Euroocan Bnckground of Philippine Representation The first decade and a half of the nineteenth century saw a succession of events in Europe which affected profoundly the lives and fortunes of the Spanish people. It was the era of Napoleon (1800-1815), during which war storms lnshed Europe leaving in their wake death, destruction and desolation. The European conflicts were a sequel of ~he French Revolution (17$9-1799), th6t mighty upheaval which swept away the Old Regime in France and established a new social and political order on the basis of t~e principles of liberty, equality and fraternity. . Out of the confusion and disorders of t.he Revolution, Napo1 eon rosr:i to supreme power and leadership in France. Having consolidated his position, Napoleon sought to bring the whole of Europt'.; under his control~· Posing as the champion of the principles and ideals of the French Revolution, he proceeded to lead the French people in a mighty crusade allegedly for the purpose of liberating manidnd from tyranny and oppression in other lands. An undertaking of that nature involved interference in the internal affcdrs of other :..1Rtions and was bound to lead to international conflict. In effect, a series of wars broke out in Europe curing the Napoleonic era. Known historically as the Napoleonic Wars, the European conflicts involved all the leading nations of Europe and were the outstanding events of European history between 1803 and Napoleon's final defeat at Waterloo in June 1815. I After the English naval victory at Trafalgar (1ao5) over the combined French and Spanish naval forces, t ho European conflicts settled down to a bitter struggle be- ,, tween the British and Napoleon. Napoleon's strategy aimed at the destruction of British trade with continental Europe, For this purpose he proposed to close Europe to British cormnerce. In two decrees, the Berl in Decree (November 21, 1806) and the J\,:..ilan Decree (December 17, 1807), Napoleon ordered the closing of the ports of continental Europe to British vessels c1nd forebade neutrals to trade with England, These two decre13s formed the framework of Napoleon's Continental System, a device with which Napoleon hoped to overthrow England, for trade with continental Europe was the basis and foundation of England's economy and material power. The success of the Continental System depended greatly upon the cooperation and loyalty of the countries of Europe. Portugal, which was bound by ties of alliance and .friendship with England, conttnued, in disrep;ard of the Continental System, to maintain commercial relations with England. Under the circumstances, Napoleon was constrained to venture into the Iberian Peninsula. Such a step inevitably involved the occupation of Spanish territory. Napoleon found no difficulty in securing that objective. In a treaty concluded in 1807 with the government of Charles IV, through Manuel G0doy, Spain's Prime l•dnister, Napoleon secured the necessary arrangements for French troops to pass through Spain and to occupy portions of Spanish territory. The presence of the French troops in Spain, however, aroused among the Spaniards feelings of resentment. Spanish resentment was turned into open hostility when it became known that NaP'Qleon in the meantime had lured CharlefJ IV and his heir Ferdinand,toBayonne, France, and, through force or diplomitic pressure, had induced both to renounce to him the Crown of Spain. As it became known that the Royal f.g_mi1y were being kept virtual prisoners at Bayonne, the citiz~ns of Madrid, on May 2, 180$, seizing such weapons as thny could find, fiercely attacked the French garrison stationed in the city, The French commander l',forat, in self d:.:dens e and then in retaliation, launched a bloody campaign a 6 cdnst the civil population of Madrid. This incident sparked a general uprising in Spain - it was the opening event of War of Spanish Independence (1$08-1813). In the hope of conciliating the Spanish people, Napoleon on June 15, 180$, summoned to Bayonne a number of Spanish notables, outwardly to seek counsel and advice from them as to reforms he proposed to institute in Spain, -.369~:he few that went to Bayonne submissively received a new sover8ign, Joseph Bonaparte, Napoleon's brother, and a new organic law for Spain patterned ~fter the French constitution, Joseph, on his own part, endeavored to win the friendship and good will of the Spanish people. Ho appointed Spaniards to high po~-1ts in the government, In his official and unofficial actuations he wanted to appear that at heart he had tchc welfaru and the best intorests of tho Spanish people •. A vast majority of thE~ Spanish pc}ople, how8vcr, chose not to accupt the new sovereign or the new constitution. Even before the promulgntion of the new constitution, revolutionary councils called 11 Juntas 11 had b,.3un set up in Asturias, Galicia, Valencia, Murcia, Badajos, and Granada '\ivhich assumed the functions of p.:overnn1ent in tl:.e nam8 and on behalf of Ferdinand VII. 6n September 25, 1801:5, a central revolutionary· body called "Junta C8ntral'1 met at Aranjuez. It became the national governing body of Spain, On January 22, 1809, the Junta J2ntral in a moment of exuberance promulf.':ated n decrH) of momentous significanc(3 to Spain-, s colonial dependcncic~.s. The decree road in part as follows: Considering that the vast and precious domains that Spain possessus in the Indias c.1re not really colonies or factories, like those of other nations, but ns sential and int egra1 parts of the Spanish 11.fonarchy; and dE:-1siring to strengthen the sacred bonds which unite us to them, and at the same timo to reward the loyalty, heroism, and patriotism of which they have just given ar1ple proof, it has seemed proper to his l~1ajesty to dt.:clare that the Kingdomt s Provinces and Islands which constitute the Spanish Monarchy referred to s:1ol:ld have national and direct representation to his royal person, and to form part of -t:;hc adrrdnist,rativc Junta Central of the King:dom through tl1eir respective representatives.I 1 - Montero y .Vidal, 2P..• cit., vol. 2. B. h, R., vol. 51, pp. 279-287, deal with the events of the period of Philippine representation in the Spanish Cortes based largely on notes made by Jnmcs A. LeRoy and on the account by l<iont ero y Vidal. -370- The 6nactment of the above mentioned decree was a notable event in Spanish colonial history. It raised the colonies of Spain, the Philippines included, to the status and dignity of Spanish provinces entitled to enjoy the right of representation by their duly chosen delegates in Spain's highest governing·body, as well as all other rights, privileges and im:1mnities of Spaniards in the Peninsula. A few months latc;r,_M~q 1809, the Junta Central decreed the establishment of tho Spanish Cortes. Because of the unfavorable military situation throughout that year, arrangements for the organization of the Cortes were postponed until a more auspicious occasion, It was not until February 1810 that a decree was promulgated prescribin~ the manner in which elections were to be held for delegat •JS to the Cortes. . In Manila, the Ayuntamiento, in accordance with the provisions of that decree, conducted an election for a deler.i:ate to the Cortes. Ventura de los Reyes, a wealthy merchant'--of Manila was chosen. Due to unavoidable delay, however, Vontura de los Rr3yes was not present at the opening session of the Cortes; September 24, 1810, Pendinf his arrival, substitute representatives represented the Philippines. They were Pedro Perez de Tagle, officer of the Royal Guard, and Josf l~nuel Couto. On December 1810, Ventura de los Heyes formally took the oath of office as proprietary delegate of the Philippines.2 2 - "Cortes" is the term used to designate the lawmaking body of Spain. As constituted at thE; close of the 19th century, it was composed o:: an upper house (Senado) and a lower house (el Congreso). The Cortas which came into bei~~ tri 1g10 was supp6sed to be a revival of the traditional institution which once exi.sted in Spain, but which finally fell into disuse with the growth of absolutism. In the old kinrdoms of Castilla and Aragon, th,:; Cortes was an important institution, sharing with the sov8reigns the legislative pow8rs of government. But, after the uni.fic2tion of Spain und,3r Ferdinand and Isabella, and with the establishment 0£ a strong central government, the Cort8s in those states lost their former prerogatives. In Aragon, the local institution Was suppressed altogether during the reign of Philip V. The Cortes of Castilla continued to exist, but it had become a mere shadow of its former self. It was summcned only on special occasions, such as at the beginning of a new reign, -371- 2. The Philippines and the Cortes of l810-lbl3 As representative of the Philippines, Ventura do los Reyes had a distinguished record. He too~c active part in the deliberations of tte Cortes and worked for the approval of measures which he belioved would redound to the progress and welfare of the Philippines. . An irnP,ortant piece of legislation adopted by the Gortes of 1810-1813 was the new constitution of Spain approved by the Cortes in March 1812. Ventura do los Reyes figured among the signers of this historic document. Eistorically known as the Constitution of 1312, this document set forth ideas and principles of government whj_ch reflected the liberal spirit and tendencies of the age in Spain. Among other thir.gs, it affirn:;_ed the principle, adopted by the Junta Central in January, 1809, that the colonies were integral parts of the Spanish Monarchy and that their inhabitants enjoyed the rights, privileges A.nd immunities of Spaniards in the Peninsula. It also proclaimed the principle of popular sovereignty. In the words of the Constitution, "sovereignty resides essentially in the Nation and for this rsason to the Nation belongs· exclusively the r~ght to establish its fundamental J.aws .r,3 The Constitution also laid dowrt safeguards and guarantees to the civil liberties and property riEhts of individuals and recognized the freedom of expression. In a lat~r session- of the Cortes, Ventura de los Reyes submitted a proposal of particular interest to the Philippines. The proposal as draftod by him read as follows: to swear allegiance to the king and his heir, or to confifrn regulations made as to succession. The Cortes which came into being in lSl0, was, in many ways, very different frc)1n th,2 troditional Spa".1.ish Cortes such as existed in the old kingdoms of Castilla and Aragon. For one thing, it included ~epres entativ0s from Spain's colonies in both hemispheres. Vioreover, unlike t~e ancient Spanish Corteses, lt possessed all the essential attributes of sovereignty. 3 - Constitution of 1812, Title I, Chapter 1, Infra. -372- Each town consisting of its justicia, principales, and cabezas de barangay choose an elector, who, with the othcirs assemblE:;d at the capital of t:,he province, shall name two el8ctors. These shall fO to the capital of the diocese and, wi~h those of th6 other provinces of the diocese, they shall choose three electors. ThesG shall go to the capital (Manila), and with ·the electors from the rest of the Archipelago, they shall namE::~ the delegates to the Cortes. The nw:nber shall not be apportioned according to population, as the country is too paor to meet the expenses of a largo delegstion and because there are not many individuals qualified for the post. The electors, therefore, arc to choose any number, but the number shall not be less than two .4 The proposed measure was intended to make the representation of the Philippines more truly represen~ative and at the same time less burdensome financially to the government of the Philippines. The proposal, however~ failed to ~et the approval of the Cortes because of strong opposition raised against it particularly by representatives from the provinces in America. The latter were not willing to gra'nt the concession· reques-sed by Ventura de los Reyes for fear that colonial officials in America mi~ht use it as an excuse for unduly reducing the size of thei~ delegations to the Cortes. As an alternative to the proposed measure, the Cortes on May 23, 1812, enacted a general election law applicable to all tl10. provinces of Spain in the 1JJ. trarnar including the Philippines. Under that law the election of delevates to the Cortes was placed in the hands of· en eiectorai board of eight members to be Set Up in the Capital City of each province. One delegate wjs to be chosen for 60,000 inhabitants in accordance with the ratio fixed by the Constitution of 1812. In 1813, the Cortes passed a measure of great interest to the Philippines. On September 1-4 of that year the ~ortes aboJ.ished the exclusive privileges which existed · in the Manila-Acapulco trade. From time immemorial, the trade between the Philippines and Nueva Espafia was ~arried on in government owned galleons. The trade was subJect to 4 - Montero y .Vidal, 12.£. f:..i ~. -373many restrictions. The number of voyages was limited; The tonnage of the vessels also was limited. The value of the cargo was limited both on the outgoing and ingoing voyage. Only holders of the 11 boletas 11 were privil8ged to take part in the trade. The law of Septcmb er 14, 1813, did away with the boleta system as well as with th,3 government owned galleons. Thenceforth, any inhn.bitant of the Philippines was free to engage in the trade with Nueva Espafia in privately owned vessr:;ls, subject only· to the conditions previously granted governing the values of the merchandise to be carried in the trade, namely 500,000 pesos in the outward voyage, and l, 000, 000 pesos on the return. In 1814, as a result of the overthrow of Napoleon, Ferdinand returned to Spain from six years of virtual captivity in France. The conditions that he found in Spain were not much to his liking. He did not look with favor upon the political and constitutional changes which had been effected di1ring his absence. He disliked pe.rticularly the Cortes and the Constitution which it had framed. · Having acquired full control of the nation's a.ffc1.irs, Ferdinand, on May 4, 1g14, a~olishsd the Cortes and declared all its acts null and void. By that action he restored absolutism in S::::iain and put-back Spain's colonies to their former colonial status. Ferdinand, however, showed himself favorably disposed toward the colonies. On June 15, 181h, he made known his readiness to consider measures affectin,I! the colonies which the colonial re1Jresentatives mir:ht see fit to bring to his attention. Ve~tura de.los Rey~s took advantage of this gesture of royal generosity. He presGnted a memorial setting forth the favors which he wanted the King to bestow upon the Philippines. He requested, in the first place, restoration of the reforms which t h,; Cort as in September 1813 had enacted and which tl1e King h1J revoked. These reforms suppressed the boleto system and granted freedom for any individual to engage in the Manila-Acapulco trade. In addition, Ventura de J.os Reyesr niemorial called for: 1) increase in the value of the trade from 500,000 pesos to 1,000,000 for the outgai1~ voyage an~ from 1,000,000 to 2,000,000 for the return; 2) the reduced tariff granted in a previous royal order for a limited period to be made permanent; 3) the Philippines to be allowed to trade with Peru and California; and 4) the· inhabitants of the Philippines to be permitted to export Philippine products in their own vessels to any port of the Monarchy -374free of export and import duties. All the things requested by Ventura de los Reyes were readily granted by the King except that relating to the value of the merchandise to be carried in the trade. He granted only an increase of 250,P00 pesos instead of 500,000 for the out?oing voyage, and 500,000 pe3os instead of 1,000, OJO for the return. Even with tnis modification, however, the concessions were quite substantial and represented a considerable gain for Philippine commerce. For one thing, new opportunities for profitable commercial ventures ~ere created for Phili~pine merchants as a result of trie increase in the value ah~ volume of Philippine trade and of the opening of Peru and California to Philippine commerce. For another, the exemption granted to Philippine products in all ports of the J\Jnnarchy was a boon to Philippine agriculture ~nd industry, , 3. The Constitution of Cadiz ~nether notable work of the Cortes of much interest to the Philippines was the approval of the Constitutiqn of Cadiz, otherwise ~nown as the Constitution of 1812. the Constitution of 1812 occupies a prominent place in the political history of Spain. It was the rallying center and inspiration of many a revolutionary rnovenient v-;hich occurred in Spain in the nineteenth century. It reflected the liberal and democratic spirit and tendencies at the time of the Spanish people. In the -i·Jords of Rubio, "the Constitution of 1512, basis of Spanish liberties, is, notwithstanding its irnperfectiors, a memorable wor~, reflecting the sincere and even candid liberal spirit o.f the patriotism and culture of our f at:1ers. 11 Th 1 OW1Dc, . ,. , e f O ]_.... • J.S a t + ...,Xv O Of t'ne .,ons -, t 1• t .. U t 10:rl as sum- marized by Hubio: 1 The Constitution is divided into ten titles divided into chapters and articles. Title I, Cha pt er I. Of the Spanish Nation. _ ''The Spanish Nation is the union of all bpaniards of both hemispheres. 1 - QQ~ cit., vol. 5, pp. 272-274. -375- "The Spanish Nation is free and independent and can not be the patrimony of any family or person,. "Sovereignty resides essentially in the Nation, and for this reason to th0 Nation belongs exclusively the right to establi3h its fundarnental laws. flThe Nation is under obligation to preserve and protect by ",-Jise and just laws the civil liberties, the property and, other lawful rights of al.l the individuals wi1o compose it. 11 Chapter II, Of the Snaniards. "Love of country is one of the prime duties To be just and beneficent_ is likewise the ~uty of a Spanish citizen." of all Spani&rds. Title II, Chapter II. "The religion of ;:,he s,anish Nation is and for eve~ shall te the Catholic, Apostolic 1 Homan, t:1e only true faith. The Na 0:;ion shal.l nrotect it by wise-and just laws, prohibiting the ~xercise of any other." Chc:ipt er III. "The government of the Spanish Nat.ion shall be a moderate, here6itary lvionarchy .11 Title III, The Cort~. This part of the Constit,~ion contRins 11 chapters. The Cortes was a. single Ctamr:.)or of Deputies. The annual meeti.ng was to lc1st for three months. It could be extended fnr one month upon agreement of ti.;,o thirds of the Deputies or on petition of the.King. The De;::mties could not accept for themselves nor soli8it for another any employment under the Crown, nor any pe11Sion or decoration while holdin~ their office. There was a Pcrn:anent Delegation of the Cortes, consisting of sr:wen members, whose duty W3S to supervise the operation of the Constitution and of the laws -376- while the Cortes was not in session, as well as to convoke the Cortes to an extraordinary session in specified cases. Title IV, The Autnority of the King. This part deals with everything pertaining to the executive power, The King was declared sacred and inviolable in his person and not subject to any responsibility. The order of succession was that of pcirnogeniturei the males to be preferred to the females, and always th'3 elder to the younger. A Regency of five persons was to be created in case of minority or of incapaci~y of the King. The number of executive secretaries was fixed at seven, namely: State, Interior, Colonies (Ultramar), Jus tice, Finance, War, and Navy. It was provided that judicial procedure should be terminated in the Audiencia of the territory in which the case arose, and that t:i1e tenure of judges was permanent~ Torture was proscribed and the penalty of confiscation of property was abolished. Title VI, The Interior Government of the Towns and Provinces. · The towns were to be governed by Ayuntamientos. The provinces were administered by the Chief Executive, the Intendant and the Provincial Delegation. Title VII, The Contr,ibut igps, Title VIII, The Armv and ..tlrn..J'lf.·.YY., ':. itle lX, ?119J.J&. Inst1:2uc tion. Article 371 of 7itle IX laid down t~e principle oi' freedom of the press in the following form: 1 "All Spaniards have the fre<3dom to write, print aqd publish their political ideas without necessity of any licensei revision or approba- .. tion before hand, subject to the rostrictions ahd responsibility provided for by the laws." -377X, Of th_g__Qbservance of the Consti-tution Title and Method of_______ Amending.........___ it. "Not until eight years have passed after the promulgation of the Constitution shall any alteration, addition, or change in its provisions be proposed. "Any change proposed in any article of the Constitution shall be made in writing and supported by at least twenty delegates." 4. The !locos Recolt, 1814-1815 The political developments in Spain which followed the restoration of Ferdinand VII to his throne produced significant results in the Philippines. They were the cause of a serious uprising in Ilocos in 1815. The people of Ilocos had been following with interest the course of events in Spain. They received with rejoicing the news of the adoption by the Spanish Cortes of the Gonstitution of 1812, with its liberal provisions extending to the inhabitants of the Philippines the rights, privileges and immunities of Spanish citizens. They expected that under the Constitution of 1812, they would soon be freed from the burdens which had long been imposed upon them, the tribute and the polos y servicios. They reasoned out that, since Spaniards and the principales' were exempted from these obligations, it would be inconsistent with, if not contrary to, the principle of equality which was proclaimed by the Constitution of 1812 for them to continue shouldering those burdens. Acting on this belief, the mass of the people of Ilocos demanded the abolition of the tribute and the personal services. Disturbances accompanied the popular agitation for the refo~m demanded. The situation became grave and serious so much so that Governor Gardoqui felt obliged to take adeq~ate measures. On February 8, ·181I+, the Governor issued a proclamation explaining to the people the real nature and scope of the benefits granted by the Constitution of 1812, Among other things, the Governor said: The Indian of the Philippines is a Spaniard for the beneficial purposes provided for -378- the Constitution; but he does not cease to be an Indian in enjoying the privileges and immunities granted to him by the laws, as was pointed out in the debates in the Cortes. He should, for this reason, continue to enjoy them without diminution. In like mar:ner, he should continue shouldering the obligations which, as an Indian, are required of him for the maintenance and conservation of these realms., by Governor Gardoqui 1 s explanation proved unconvincing and failed to calm the masses. Just then news arrived of the abolition of the Cortes and of the revocation of the Constitution of 1812. -The people would not believe that the events as reported really happened. They had the suspicion that government officials in Manila fabricated the report to make them desist from pressing their demands and thereby pe:!:"petu.ate the ur..just and oppressive burder..s which:, they sincerely believe~I, the Constitution of 1812 had removed. .Announcement o: the 11€WS was followed by uprisings of a more violen~ natilre. Several we3lthy indivi~ duals were ~illed, considerable property was lost, and the books and official records in the archi~es of many municipalities were destroyed.6 The reiolt of 1815 was the ihird of a series of uprisings that occurred, in rapid succession, in the province of Ilocos in the early years of the nineteenth century. The firs~ of these took place in 1807. Starting in the tow~ of Piddig, it qui~~ly spread to other towns o~ Ilocos. The people were resentful over the government monopolies, especially that of wine whi8h involved the prohibition of ba.§..i_; the popular drink. The revolt was an arnect·protest against these restrictions. In 1811, the natives of Ilocos again took 5 - Montero y Vidal, op. cit. 6 - A uore aetailed acc-ount··-of the uprising of H515 is to be found in Sinibaldo de l\fas' Inforrr,e Sob re el EstaQ.Q. de las Islas Filip~_n§_§_. A contempora°ry accoi1nto.-f..t'hisepisode is ~La 1v1emoria sabre la I:1surrecci6n Acaecida en el ano 1815," by Fr. Jose Nieto, curate of Sarrat. An extract of this memorial is to be found in Retana' s Archive 9s.l Bibliofilo Filipipo, vol. four. ----- - -379- up arms, This ~ime, it was for the defense of a newlyfounded .religion. The principales and cabezas de barangay had established a new religion, having, as its chief god, Lung_ao. The revel t spread to the mountain districts of Cagayan, where the leaders of the new sect had gone to arouse the inhabitants there to take up arms in defense ~f their cause, This uprising, as was that of 1go7, was speedily suppressed. The Ilocos revolt of 1815 did not differ much from those that occurred in previous centuries as far as the basic causes of the uprisings are concerned. Like many of its predecessors, it arose from the same old sources of popular discontent - the tribute and the personal services. Apart from these, there was another impelling motive in the !locos affair~concern for political and constitutional rights. The .1locos rebels were- aware of the change that had taken place in the political status of the Philippines as a result of the prom .1lgation of the Constitution of 1812. They lmew what that change meant to civil and political rights and interests of the inhabitants of the Philippines.- It is clear that the Ilocos affair was, in its nature and. in the s.cope of its outlook and interests, truly national. As such it is worthy of a place in the history of nationalism in the Philippines. 1 5. The Cortes of 1820-1823 The next perioi of constitutional government in Spain began in 1820. In :Harch of that year the Spanish people, under the leadership of Riego and Quiroga, rose in revolt. They demanded the restoration of the Constitution of 1812. F~erdin&nd VII was forced to yield to the popular demand. rte swore allegiance to the Constitution and promised to lead the nation along the constitutional way. The Spanish Revolution of 1820 was the Spanish phase of the liberal and nationalistic movement which arose in Europe in the post Napoleonic erR, That movement reflected the feeling of disappointment and discontent among peoples in various European countries over the political nrrangements made by the Congress of Vienna. With the restoration of the Constitution of 1312, the Cortes once more came into being and the Philippines again -380- rose to the status of a Spanish province with the privilege of sendin_<s its own representative to the Spanish Cortes. As in the previous period, substitute representatives represented the Philippines in the first sessions of the Cortes of 1820~1823, The substitute representatives were Jose l·~aria A:rnedo a~1d Manuel Felix Camus y Herrera. The elected delegates from the Philippines were Francisco Bringas, ex-alcalde mayor of Ilocos, Vicente :Posada, forr,1er member of the Real Audiencia, and l\:ianuel Saenz de Vizmanos, senior accountant of the Tribunal of Accounts. The Cortes which met in this ueriod of constitutional g,wernrnent enacted a number of l;gislative measures of considerable interest and significance to the Philippines. One of these, approved on October 19, 1820, abolished the privileges granted to the Real Compafiia de Filipinas. The action was taken allegedly on the ground that the existence of the privileges was contr&ry to the letter and spirit of the Constitw~ion and that it was prejudicial to the nation's interests. The Royal Company had been 6reated to pro.mote Spain's commerce with the Far Sast but it appeared that not only had it failed to accomplish its mission, but also it had made improper and unwise use of the privileges granted to it. The action of the Cortes reflected, for one thing, the disappointment which ffi3.ny people in Spain felt over the activities of the Real Compania de Filipinas. For another, it was an indication of the rise in Spain of a more liberal spirit and tendency in commercial matters. On 1fovember S, 1820, Cortes approved another law as a corollary to that which abolished the privileges of the Real Comps.nia de F'ilipi:'.13.S. T:ie law gave permission to bpanish citizens to engage in trade with the Far East subject to the rules ~nd regulations prescribed by the Cortes. The measure contained provisions of particular interest to the Philippines. One of these required that "products and goods produced or n,.anu:~&ctured in the PhiJ_j_ppines shall be considered national. 11 Another stipulo.ted that the value of Asiatic merchandise to be brough·::. to Spanish ports in America or iurope was not to exceed 50JOOO duros in each vessel, and that the rest of the cargo should be made up of goods or effects of the PhilippinesG A third provided that adequc1te steps be taken 11 to encourage the agriculture, industry, navigation, and commerce of the -381- Philippine Islands." In.one of the sessions of the Cortes in June 29, 1821, another law affecting the Philippines was approved. On the recommendation of one of the substit .1te representatives for the Philippines, the Cortes pas3ed a law establishing direct and periodic mail service with the Philippines. The significance of this law lay in tte fact that it brought the Philippines into closer com:r;;.unication and contact with Spain. 1 The Constitutional period which began in 1820 ended in 1823, It came as a result of foreign intervention in Spain. A French army invaded J~ain (18~J) and restored Ferdinand tb his former status as absolute ruler of Spain. As on the former occasion, Ferdinand, upon his restoration, abolished the Cortes, revoked the Constitution of 1812, an.j declared null and void all the rneasurc:s enacted by the Cortes. Many of the reforms, l1owever, which were p;rornulgatcd during "this period and which, directly or indirectly concerned the Philippines, were preserved. The period extending from Ferdinand's first restoration in 1814 to his second,res,c.oration in 1823 :1as a special significance in Spanish colonial history. It was in this period that the vast colonial empire of 3pain in the New Vforld was disrupted. The American coloni3s took advantage of the internal tro~bles and difficulties of Spain during the Napoleonic Wars to win fo::." thems el vos freedom ano. independence :!:rom the Mother country. 1i'Jhen, upon the restoration of Ferdinand in 1814, ~pain attempted to bring them back to their allegiance to hor, they took up arms and crushed the attempt. By J.823, nothing had remained of the one e ext cns i ve 3panis h empire in America but a few islands in the West I.ndL:s. Ml:xico) through which Spanish-Philipnine relations were cari·ied on from the first years or·· Spanish colonization in ·th,~ Philippines, was one of tho3e which datuched themselves from Spain. As a result, the close co:rnf'c.:. i_on which thq Philippines had had with that country w2.s terminated. 8panishPhilippine relations thenceforth were plocod on a more tlirect basis • -382- 6. The Cortes of 1834-1837 The ten-year period extending from Ferdinand 1 s restoration in 1823 to the year of his death in 1833 is often referred to as the Age of CRlomarde. It was a period of reaction mnr1'::ed i.):' a deter,nined ::md sustained campaign of suppression &galnst ~nanish liberals. Fr3ncisco 7adeo Calomarde -.vcl s F erci.inand. VII' s mLdst er of just ice. He assumed the duty and responsibility of stamping out liberal activities and tendencies in Spain. Calom~rde performed his mission efficiently and well. He regarded all who wore kno~n to have liberal ideas and tendencies as subversive and disloyal to the Crown. All such persons were unrelentingly piJ.rsued and persecutsd. To escape persecntion, many Spanish liber9.ls fled from S.pair1 and sought refuge in other lands. Ferdinand died on Sep+,err:b er 29, 1833. Three years before his death, he prowul?ated, in the form of a pragmatic sanction, a testar,en+.:, n&mine; his infant daughter, Isabel, his heir and successcr to the throne. Ferdinand's act set aside the rig:1.ts 0£' Carlos, hie younger brother, i-• • ~ • · o ...t"'' succession. • 1 vl,10, un d.er -c· "h•• e S a __7 ic .i.E:W, was nex:..,.,_ in ..Llne Carlos naturally resented the action of Ferdinand although he refrained from ta~ir:.g any steps to enforce his claim while his.brother was still alive. Bpon Isabel's accession to the throne as queen in accordance with F8rdinand's testament, Carlos proclaimed hi~self the rightful ruler of Spain. The conflicting 1 - The Salic law excluded females from :?uccession to the throne. :::t had teen introduc~d in Spain by Philip V, the first of the Bou:·bon Kinga of ::>9ain, '1.}ie ancient Castillar. ruls embodied ir:: t:1E:i co.:le of iilfo•.1,so X, El Sabio, King of Cast,illa .(1252-1284), gave the r~ght of succession to the first, born, IP.ale or _+- er.1c1.l e, accorci.ing to the principle of priQogeniture. Tjis rule was rescored by the Constitution of 1312. J...s ·;:,ne Co:1.sti'cution :.1ad been abolished by Ferdinand, the Salic law was deeemed to be the rule applicable in a question of succession at the time of Ferdinand I s reign. That law, how ever, Ferdinand revoked w'len he promulgated his testament in the form of a pragmatic sanction. -383claims brought on a war of succession. The war which ensued lasting from 1833 to 1839, was the first of a series of wars known in 0panish history as Carlist wars. These wars flared up time and again during the 19th century. Together with other internal troubles, they made conditions in Spain very much disturbed and unsettled, at times verging on chaos and anarchy, during a considerable part of the 19th century. To strengthen the side of the Government in the conflict with Carlos, Queen Regent Cristj_na took steps to win the support, loyalty and good will of the Spanish liberals. On April 10, 1834, she promulgated a decree introducing important changes in the governmental system of Spain. Historically known as Royal Statute (Estatuto Real), the decree reestablished the Spanish Cortes.· The Cortes under the Royal Statute differed in many ways from the Cortes established by the Constitution of 1812. In the first P.lace, it was a bicameral body, consisting of an Upper House {Estamento de Proceres) and a Lower rlouse (Estamento de frocuradores), In the second place, the Cortes had very limited powers. It could not deliberate on matters not expressly submitted to it by the Crown. It could meet only on special occasions, such as at the beginning of a new reign, to swear allegiance to the new sovereign, or in times of some grave emergency when the interests of the Nation, in the judgment of the Crown, required the convening of the Cortes. Moreover, under the Royal Statute, the Crown retained all the essential attributes of sovereignty. It had the power to summon the Cortes, to designate the place of its meeting, and to suspend it, and even to dissolve it. The Cortes was, thus, little more than a consultative body, much like the emasculated Cortes which existed in the times of the first Spanish Haps burgs. l,1oreover, the Royal Statute, unlike the Constitution of 1812,had no provision permitting representation of the colonies in the Cortes by substitute representatives. The Royal Statute had been granted by the Queen Regent as a political concession to win the good will and s.upport of the Spanish liberals. The latter, however, were not satisfied with it. In fact they felt that, as a basis of government, it was highly reactionary. Their attitude toivards the regime of Queen Cristina was, for this reason, one of distrust and dissatisfaction. And -384- this sentiment was shared by a considerable portion of the Spanish people. Popular sentiment was for the restoration of the Constitution of 1812. In August 1836, the royal guard, voicing the popular des.ire, mutinied, The 1 e'.lders of the uprising called upon Cristina to restore the Constitution of 1812. The Queen Regent was con3trained to :,rield. On August 13, 1836, she ordered that the Gonstit J.tion of 1812 be restored as the fundamental law of the land pending the adoption of a new constitution for Spain. In ar,other decree, Cristina summoned a constituent Cortes to draft ~ new constitution. · 1 The constituent Cortes assembled in October 1836. In a secret session held early in 1837, the Cortes approved a resolution providing that the colonies of Spain no longer should have any representation in the Spanish Cortes. The provision was incorporated in the nev1 constitution which was approved June lS, 1837. By virtue of th~t provision, SpainTs colonies, ~he Philippines included, were put back to their former colonial status. The history of Philippine representation :Ln the Cortes of 1834-1~37 is given by lviontero y Vidal in the follovdng . passagest.1.. On the 2nd of February, 183 5, the §3.11ta Ana of the Cornpania de Filipinas arrived a.t Manila, bringing despatches relative to the rcstor~tion of constitutional government in Spain, th8 promulgation of the Royal Statute (Estatuto Real) and the calling of a new Cortes. EnriJ_e asked the Ayuntamiento to name the residents who were to form the electoral board, in accord~nce with article 48 of the royal decree of lvby 20th, 1834. 2 1 - foontero y Vidal, QI:.. c it_. 2 - According to this decree the electoral board was to be composed of the members of the Ayuntamiento and of an equal number of well-to-do residents appointed by the Ayuntamiento itself, with the Captain-General or his delegate as presiding officer. The Philippines was allowed to nam~ two delegates. -385- The Cortes assembled on the 24th of July 1834 and closed on the 29th of May, 1835. Thruout the session of the Cortes the Philipnines was unrepresentect.3 ·• By law promulgated by the Cortes and sanctioned by the Queen Regent on the 20th of May, 1835, a gradual stamp impost was established on documents used for tr3nsfer of property, bills of exchange, promissory notes and letters of credit of a fixed amount. In the first meeting of the second session of the Cortes held November 12, 1835, D. Juan Francisco Lecaros and D. Andres Garcia Canilia, representatives elect from the Philippines presented themselves with their respective credentials. On the 16th they were sworn into office as representatives from the Philippines. Camba formed part of a -committee on etiquette; he presented a proposition which was not accepted, regarding the ceremonial which members must observe, and he took part in the discussion,of the bill regarding the national guard. Lecaros spoke in the debate on the answer to be made to the message from the Throne. ~ In January, 1836, the Cortes were dissolved. On the same day, an order was pro~1lgated for the meeting of a new Cortes on the 22nd of March. This legislature lasted from 22nd of lV1arch to r;lay 23, 1836, being dissolved on the latter date. The Philippines was not represented in this Congress. A new legislature was summoned to assemble on the 20th of August. An election held in the Philippines for delegates to the new Cortes resulted in the reelection of Camba and Lecaros. 3 - The elections for delegates to the Cortes were held on the 1st of l'viarch, 1835, D. Andres Garcia Camba, brigadier in the army, and Juan Fran_cisco Lecaros, Filipino lawyer who, at the time, was in Madrid as commissioner of the Manila ~yuntamiento, being elected. Camba embarked for Spain on March 21, 1835, but did not arrive until August when the session of the Cortes had already closed. -386- Before the new legislature could meet, the famous mutiny of La Granja had taken place, which forced the Queen Re.2:ent to .issue the fo2-lo·,vini:i: decree: 11 As Queen Regen-~ of Spain, I her9by order and command that the Constitution of 1812 be promalgated and obser 1ec. penr:ling the oror:uL~atj_o:i. bv tne nation in Co.ctes a::.,.'3e:21b~.'._ed o:: a naw constit'J.tior.on A constit~ent~Cortes was convened to meet on the 24th of October, 1536. 1 - . _. J. - .,J In the secret session held January·l6, 1837, D. Vicente Sancho, representative from Valencia, presented a proposition to the effec~ that the provtnces of ~he Ultrarna~ be governed by special laws. The cornmit-!-~ee to whish this me3.surt w.3s re£'erred reported on the 10th of ·Fe·oruary arid pro-posed that the Sp2nish provinces in AmeriGa and Asia shoul:i in the future be governed ':iy special laws, and that their rep:..~2sen:::.atives stou]_d no longer sit in thG Cortes. The concJudint pa~~ of the report reads as fo:lows~ "In view of the fact that the Constltution to be adaoted in the Peninsula canno~ be applied to the p~c~inces of ~he J~tram3r, thase shall hencafcrth be governed ty special laws, fraoed to suit tL.ei:r respective circumstances and to promote their happiness. Consequently, their repres entati ves shall r:o longer sit in the Cort3s ." In l½arch, 1837, an election vJas i1eld in Manila· for delega~es to this Cortes, re3ulting in the choice of Camba and D, Luis Prude:ricio Alvarez y Tejera, formerly of the Manil~ Auaienci2. The latter had no opportunity to show w~~t he could do as Philippine delegate for he arrivad in Spain afte~ tha passing of t~e resolution ex~ludi~g the representa~ives of the Ultramar from the Cortes. With the promulr-;c::ttion of the Constitution of H~37, tte period of 2?h.iJ ipp::..ne represantation in the bpanish C~rtes came to a close. Al~~nugh such representation was not. in the strict 3ense of the ~ord, really and truiy ~epresentative bf the Philippines and of the Fi.:i.ipino peop'_e 1 .it was a memorable experience for the ·Philippines. . It brought the -3S7- Philippines, for one thing, into closer contact with Spain and Spain's colonies in the Mew World. For another, it contributed in some way to the development of the spirit of nationalism among the Filipinos. Years later, the leaders and spokesmmn of the Filipino people voiced a demand for the restoration to the Philippines of tbe privilege she formerly enjoyed of bsi~g represented in the Spanish ~ortes. The resto~ation of Philippine representation in the Spanish Cortes 1r~as or:.e of the major reforms the Filioino nationalists sought to obtain from Spain in th~ decade preceding th; outbreak of the Philippine Revolution. -JSS- CHAPTER TWO COlVIJ\JIERCIAL PROGRESS, 1800-1865 The political and constitutional developments which took place in Spain in the first years of the nineteenth century were accompanied by important changes in Spain's commercial policy in the Philippine3. In 1813) the Spanish Cortes liberalized the J.V:ar:-.::.l.a-Acapu1co trade by c:..bolish .. ing the J.capulco galleon and discontinuing the use of boletas in the trade with Nueva Espana. In 1314, Ferdinand VII, besides confirming many of the changes effected by the Cortes, gave further commercial concessions to the Philippines, In 1820, the Spanish Cortes swept away the monopolistic features of Snan!~t trade with the Philippines and Asia by suppressing the exc.L1sive privileges grar.ted by law to the Real Compania de Filipinas. This reform was followed a few years later, {1830) by the opening of the port of Manila, on a permanent basis, to foreigners for trade and residence~l Subsequently (1858), three other ports were opened. Sual in Pangasinan, Iloilo in the Western Visayas, and Zamboa.nga, in Mindanao. In 1865, Cebu, in the Central Visayas, was likewise made an open port. These developments reflected the rise in Spain and elsewhere in Europe of liberal id.eas and tendencies in commercial matters. They v~e-,,,e conter:rporaneous with the opening of Siam} China, anc~ Jap2n to foreign nntions, the abandonment by the Dutch of t:rn::r trade mor:cpo1y in the East Indiee, and the abolition by the Britjsh ?Arliament of the trac.e monopoly long enjoyed '.Jy the Er itish East India Company. The document which follow deal wit~ these developments and their effects upon various aspects o:: life in the Philippines. 1 - Manila had been opened to European traders as ear'I'he o;::ienir:g of Manila at that time~ however, was a concession rr.a.de solely in the interest and for the benefit of the Real Compania de Filipinas o ly as 1789, -389- 1. Regidor - Mason's Account, on Philippine Commercial Progressl After the forrr,ation of the second Company of the Philippines, the Spaniards realized that it was futile to isolate Manila commercially, any longer from the surrounding trade centers, and in 1780, European vessels were given formal permission to convey the goods of all the Indies to the Philippines.2 Succeeding this 1 foreign merchants were allowed to visit Manila for a few months at a time during the busy part of the trading season} and finally, they were granted the right of permanent residence. When the first European commercial house was established at Manila is not known. La Perouse mentions a French merchant, named Sebir, who resided in Manila, in 1787, but according to other records, it was not until 1809 that a foreign house) an English company, was allowed admittance, while others began to follow in 1a14. At first they were permitted only to deal in local Oriental trade, but in 1820 they were allowed to export goods to Spain, and later to all Europe,3 Pioneers of Foreikn Tr2de.- When the merchants of the worJ_d were invited into.-the Philippines, American trade in the Far East was on the crest of a prosperity wave, and it was but natural thst it should roll across the China sea from Canton to Ma- 1 - E~nts from "Commerr:ial Progre,ss in the P!'lilipQine ~.§_l:_anci4," by Antonio M. Regidor yJurado and j7Jarrent T. Mason. t__Landon, 1905). 2 - It was in 1789 that the port of Manila ·was opened for the first time to the vessels of foreign nations. See Azcarraga' s account, given els ev.ihere in thee e R§.:1:..Y.i!J:g.§.. 3 - The comin,q of foreign9rs to the Philippines, under. the new commercial policy, was ·liewed vJith jealousy and mis giving by members of the Spanish community, especially those whose interests were likely to be adversely affected by the commercial activiti1:;s of the new comers. These were the ones believed to be responsible for the di,sorders of 1820 in Binondo in which several foreigners were killed. That incident was a manifestation of the anti-foreign sentiment existing at the time. nila with great force.4 No sooner were the foreign traders s ettl e,d in Manila, than they entered into the thick of a commercial conflict. America, represented by the two houses of Russell, Sturgis nnd Co., and Peele, Hubbell and Co., at once took a chief part in the contest. England v1as the nearest rival, and the other nations brought·up far in the ree.r, for the m3rkets of GT'3at. Bri-cain and the United States offered the best prices for the chief goods that the Phili~)pines no·:r.J cegan to export; hemp, sugar, tobacco and indigo. ~he firm of Russell, Sturgiss towered abc7e all the other mercantile establishments. Unde~ the name of J. and T. H. Perkins ttey had been among the foTerr..ost merchants of Co.nton, and their renutation was further increased by the fact that though Americans, they -were the representatives in the Orient of the great Enelish banking rouse of Baring Brothers, of w:nch Mr. Sturgis later became senirn' part::.er" Mr. Rt::ssell adve:::.~tised his firm by lavish entertainments. He gave big djnners and receptions~ a1rr:.os·~ ni 0 htl y, and x:ept practically open house at Manila, ~hi}e the same of his social activity spread over tte Archipelago, giving a reputation for wealth and pro~i~ence to his concern that dwarfed all competitors. Earlv Banking Instit1rtions,- ThB chief foreign traders) ·oesicie ciea1 L1g in merchandise, went into the banking business as well. Formerly, the confraternities, that loa~ed money to the Spaniards engaged in the export trade, possessed a monopoly of this lucrative field, and loaned the charity endowments in their possession at exhorbitant rates of interest. They charged as high as 50 per cert on shipments to Mexico, 35 per cent tc I~ct~a, and 25 per cent to China, though it was not legal for them to accept interest in excess of 5 per cent. 4 - The first American vessel to call at the port of Manila was the 11 Astrea 11 , ~vith Captain Henr;r Prince in comrr..and. Sl1e ente~~ed the port October 3, 179(>. S. 1e l~ft -with a cargo of sugar, pepper, hemp and in.c,igo on which $24,000 were paid at th,2 sa- _c-ort C'J.stom ifouse :i_L duties. See Russel, "Beginnings and Esr~-Y Gr-0vJ~_:h ')f L:rier:_ca:'"1 'I'rade with Manila," in the AmericaQ._Cha1_db..fil' __o.f Cs)I~morce_ .J"ot:_~:--nal for June, 1922, 1 1 -391Financial Houses of Damaso Gorricho and Franci§_Q._0_3q_d:-::.g~_§_~o- Shortly after the arrival of the foreign traders, two Filipino financial houses were opened, one by Damaso Gorricho, who was educated in Paris, which did a small business as a simple money lending concern, and the other by Francisco Rodriguez, educated at Calcutta and Goa, which was managed by him under the protection of the British .Consul at Manila. The Ro~ri~~ez Bank was the first financial institution to be· organized by a Filipino; and its establishment was brought about in a peculiar manner. In 1825, Francisco Rodriguez, who was a very wealthy house-owner in Manila, was arrested one nie;ht while on his way home, wrongly charged with being concerned in a native uprising .5 The next morning he was sent to Cadiz as a political prisoner. .After his arrival in Spain, he escaped, and made his way to London. He was unsuccessful :in his-attempts to induce his friends and relatives in Manila to help him, and though one of the wealthiest Filipinos of that time, he was in danger of dying through neglect, when he was taken in by an American Quaker community in London, and cared for. He lived with the Quakers for five years, adopt- 5 - This incident happened in 1823, ciuring the governorship of Juan Antonio Martinez. When Martinez came to the Philippines, he brought with him several army officers from the Peninsula, evidently to supersede the officers of the army here, most of whom were Mexican Spaniards. Mexico had just won her independence from the mother country. Government officials felt that·, in the appointment of officers in the armed forces, preference should be given to Peninsular Spani,g_rds. The arrival of tr,e new officers cau[,ed much uneasiness among the elder officers who feared that they might be discriminated against in matters of preferment, if not eventually separated al together from the service. They talked so much against the newcomers that they soon aroused the suspicions of the autherities. Governor Martinez finally discovered that the Mexican-Spanish officers were plotting and conspiring against the government. He ordered the arrest of the persons suspected of this conspiracy and sent them tc Spain February 18, 1823. Among those sent a ,vay were Luis Hod:riguez Varela, styled El Conde Filipino, D. F. Rodriguez, and Jose Ortega, factor of the Compafiia de Filipinas. An aftermath of this episode was the Novales mutiny of June, 1828, in which ex-governor Folgueras was killed. See l.Vv;,ntero y Vidal, £12.• cit., vol. 2. 0 -392ed their faith, and became a naturalized British subject. At the end of that time, the Filipinos charged with participating in the 1825 revolution were pardoned by the Spanish government, and Rodriguez returned to Ma:::iila. Garbed in his Quaker costume, which had never before been seen in the Philippines, 11e was lcoked t'_pon as a mad man, and ' as he walked thrcugh the streets, the children ran after him, shouting and jearing. His treatment at t11e hands of his .former frir:;nds was as that of outcast, and the Friars attempted t_Q compel him to leave the Islands, but his British citizenship protected. him from expulsion, anj he remained. Ernbit-· tered by his e:;;:pericmce, Rodriguez, popularly known as Qg_ico Rod.LLK~l.§1:, declined further intercourse with riis i'orme::;_n countrymen. He even refused to speak tbe 2.panish languag<::: and ·would converse with no one who could not understand English. He became associated with the foreign merchants, and with the principal object of assisting the European traders, at the expense of the Spaniards, he est_abJished a bank. The institution was conducted as a companion of the British and American banks, and materially assiated the traders of those countries in their dealings, with the Filipinos. On his death, Rodriguez left his entire fortune to the Queen of England, in trust for the widows and children of the British soldi3rs, who were kil!ed in the Crimean War. Rodrigu13zt s relatives attunpted to break the will, and secured a judgment in their favor in the Manila courts. The British governm:mt appealed to the Supreme Court at Madrid, ano. obtained ,3 reversal of the Manila decision, tii_e money uU:,:lniately being paid to the British authorities. Abcmt tl1e time of the closing of this bank, Mctriano T,.Flson, a Filipino, opened another of his own on th0 s.am9 lines. E.~orr-an:i~ati<lli_ of tl-te Cbras Lia.~.- While the Rodriguez ba~k was assisting t~e foreigners, the . confraternities were hE;loing the Spaniords, but oviing_ to the lower rates of intdrl,St charged by the foreign1:;rs, it became impossible for conl.raternities to rivrll them, and the lvic:nila authoriti,3s soug11t to combin8 the confraternit:.ies for t 1-ie purpose 'Jf ma:dng their f i:i.anc ial bus i:1ess more successful . The con~r2terniti0s, too, ware gradually assumi~g & political activity, t~at c~us~d the government-some alarm, ::tnd gave a more imperative re2,son w:by they -393should be amalgamated, and placed under the observance of the authorities4 In 1841, all the smaller confraternities were dissolved, leaving the field to four large ones, that between tl-iem controlled most of the charitable endowment funds. Three were lay brotherhoods connected with religious orders, the Venerable Ordeg Terc.era de ~'.an Franc~, the Venerable Ord.§.!J:~erce_r_cL.9.e Santo Domingo, and the Hermandad de ~e§.Q_!i_ Nazarono de RecoJ_5_!;_Q.§., while the fourth La Mi~ricordia, the secular priests controlled. An agitation for the amalgamation of these four remaining confraternities was not successful, until 1851, when the Captain-General of the Philippin~s, Urviztondo, acting on his own responsibility, without consulting his superior officers at Madrid, combined the confraterni~ies, calling the new institution the Obras Pias. The ~panish government approved the amalgamation in 1854, and the articles of association were granted August 13, 1857. The Obras Pias did not wait for sanction from M~drid 1 but oteying the orders of Urviztondo, immedic::itGly after the amalgamation, began to conduct business under the changed conditions. The new institution was placed under the joint control of a directive committee consisting of the Archbishop of Manila, the Chief Justice of the Manila courts, the Controller of the Treasury, the Attorney General and a Secretary; and of an administrative committee, comprising· a member of each of the three orders that had previously boen connected with the confraternity funds, a judge of the supreme court, an accountant and a secretary. The financial liberty of the Obras Pi1.s was confined by numerous restrictions. ,'.I'r.e Banco-Es:gafi.Q.1-Fil ipino. - In 18 52, the BancQEmlaiiol ·~F:iLiW-.llQ. was founded by Urviztondo in JVIanila and those interested in the Spanisr bank had such powerful influences behind them that the Obras Pias was discriminated against in order to give business to the other. 6 The Obras Pias and the BallQ.,q..:,~_spafiolFilioin_Q_ were operated, in e:r.'fect, as two branches of the same institution. The former was compelled by the Spanish authorities to und8rtake the less remunerative nart of a banking business and was forced ~ ·into a p9sition of little more tl-i.,m an imperfectly designed mortgage bank, run for the convenience of the native Filipinos and Spaniards. It was made to 6 - Thlsbank is now known as "The Bank of the Philippine Islands. 11 The new name was adopted ,j_n 1912. -394accept mortgages on houses or town buildings properties, in full security ·for loans, when houses were not easily reconvertible intb money. Its business consisted of little more than this, while the Banco.E§nafiol-Filip_t,nQ, was given ev~ry rigl1t the authorities could extend, to ele·1~te ·.it.to a commanding position. It was permitted to require what security it desired for loans~ and was al:owad the sole right of issuing bank notes. It beca@e, in fact, and legally the official government bank of the Philippines, and in return for the privileges granted it, the directors undertook to further Snanish trade intereets in the Islands. • On the one side trere was then formed the Obras J:.ia£. and the Banco-Es_panQl-Filipino, and on the otrer the Rodriguez and Tu8son banks and the banks of the foreign merchants, each side, at first, cor.rrnercially combattine: the other The foreigners ta d the better position, - for their -oanks v-Jere nothing more than adjuncts of tr;E;ir trading houses, formed primarily to draw local products into their hands. When the traders of America and Europe went to the Philippines, they found the activity of the native owners and a~riculturalists so limited by the trade re~ulations and persecutions of the Spaniards, t~at it was impossible for the Filipinos to raise produce for export without assistance. The Spaniards and their . descendants were entitled by law to obtain loans from what was called Fondcis de Comunidad (Community Funds); Wrich were accumufa-fed from csrtctin taXE:S. These funds were to be administered by the authorities as a kind of Agricultural Bank, but were Very seldom applied to such purpose as only a fev,1 gr.::rnts were m,ade to some special protege of the Manila i:::l.l:::th:Jrities. The natives longed to find an outlet for t~eir restricted energies, through forei~n chann0ls; but they could do nothing without money which t~e Government and the Friars would not loan t~em fo~ harvosting crops destined for consumption abroad. _Under the cld regime;, the Filipino farmers rad lived C::t -r.::md to ·mouth existence held in practical bondafe by the Friars who, claiming ownership of t re soil ri.ad forcc.:d the natives to run into debt every year to secure the money necessary to bear the eipense of gathering their small crops. o ~fortgR12:e Loans.- In the early period of the Spanish sovereignty over the Islands, the authorities -395at Madrid had decreed that no Filipino could be held li.able fnr the repayment of any loan above twentyfive dollars, which restriction was evaded later on by securing the loans by a mortgage. 'I'he original intention of the law was to protect the natives from falling into the hands of rapac:i.ous money lerlders, but in practice, the sys·com ~eca~e tyrannous. Under it, .•. ·,~-'. ... ,-,,-. • •..r·,-1th e ...H'1•1.:.l.p.Lno ag,.:.. ,. ,__j ·'·•,,urJ ·,.,s -v;__,,_rc: ,,u.1aiJ.e t o f inc1 money for their harvestings excgpt by associating with the ·religious orderc or capitalists on usurious conditions, and their pleas to have the law repealed were without result, for under the law, the natives were placed at the mercy o:: the Friars~ who successfully combatted all attempts at amen.dment, until abou~ thirtyfive years ago, after the over-shrow of the monarchy, and the establishment of ~he rapublic in Spain. 'r,,• " ,.,. O '·] Cron Loans. - The foreign mercriants were compelled to ac(a.9'c-themsel~1es to~these conditions, in advancing money to the natives for the purpose of attracting business. The foreigners did not care to follow the example of the Friars and accept land mortgages, for no land of anj value to them w3s securable, so they adopted another method of evading the ~wentyfi ve dollar loan law. They estimat cd at t r:e beginning of each season what the value of the forthcoming harvest would be, and paid the.Filipino farmers for it in advance. If, when the ~irvest was over, the advance price was found to be too little, the Filipinos were given the balance; while, if it turned out that the crop had been over--estirnated, the difference in value we.s cor.ipensated by extending tre sE,le to the next harvest. This system of money J.ending was adopted witrout thougrt of making a prof lt on ·the loans themselves, w'.1i:e the two Spanisr a::1.d ~iliJ?ino banks, on t~e other hand, we~e enga;2J pr1~a~1ly, in making a profit for themselves ou~ c. f _·::,},<:Lr J.oans, the facilitation of the busi~ess of the ~psnls0 tra. . ... d ers b e1.ng o f s aeon d ary umcr,.,ance. .11.:8. }.,:~.r.:.~0..:: E"':i-::inr·'--~~:;,i_nino ~ft-er a -·-·.::r1° f'ot··-r.d tr~ 1•• ,i·."·t.>u.si_,r;:-:,, ,,, et • nss;.:, W&S p e::i.:-_;_g b sri0usly hancJ.C8.pp,::)d C:;· l.'CS pO..l....i.CY of showing favoritism to the S:'.Jctn:Lsri. mu·c;1Emts, and fin::illy it ci:r:-o~)ped it.s an-ci-foreig:8 mE'-)~~r,ods ., and worlced in harmomr with the EuroDean and Ainsrican tra-,. ders, contributi~g to the extension of their business. "11,.. .. _.}...., · '-:-- .L 1,.) ~.. _.t., . _ _,,_ • V ,- U ...._. I,..• ~ •·• ~ - 'I Q. •; ~- - 1 ~ ,_, , •, -396Demands for Greater Commercial Facilities: Cone essions Granted.- While the foreign merchants were co.ntending among themselves for the export trade of the Archipela~o, they were united in demanding that greater facilities be extended to them for the development of their business. The 0panish authorities were not pleased by the manne~ in which the foreigners were s~izing for themselves all the benefits that followed t'rie development of the Islands' resources, and they were inclined to return to their former selfish policf of reserving untouched that part of the wealth of the Islands that could not be secured by the Spaniards themselves. The foreign traders constantly brought pressure to bear on the Manila authorities to secure more freedom, but they obtained no satisfaction. The principal objects in the list of grievances of the traders were the refusal of the authorities to open other ports beside Manila to foreign ships, thus necessitating the conyeyance of produce from the most distant parts of the Archipelago to the Capital at entirely unnecessary cost; t~e retention by the Government of a monopoly of the tobacco industry, greatly increasing the cost of tl,e weed to exporters; the monopoly also of the manufacture of spirit in the Islands, restricting the irr:portations, and the discouragement of the immigration of t 1-:e industrious C11inese. In 1834, the Government soug 11t to mollify the traders by establishing at ivSanila a 'i'ribunal of Commerce consisting of three official appointees, and four others, selected by trie merchants therns elves, to n::.ake recommendations for the extension of trade; fhe recornmen• dations were seldom carried out, and like many other Spanish institutions in the islands the Tribunal was as useless in practice as it was beneficial in theory. In 1535, a Ghamber of Commerce was founded, possessing authority to adjust petty disputes among the Manila merchants, but as judicial decisions usually favored the litigant with t'be more social or financial influence, the most important work of the Chamber was to induce merchants to be wary or running counter to one another.? 7 - The Tribunal of Commerce (Tribunal de Comercio) was created by the decree of January 1, 1834, to try cases arising under the new Spanish Code of Commerce, which was -397Sue~ answers as these to the appeals of the traders served only to increase their impatience, and finally they began to withdraw their capital from the Archipelago to use it on the Chinese mainland, where the activity of England was forcing the spread of free trade. In 1824, England purchased Singapore, and in 1841, Hongkong passed under the British flag, both parts being made trade bases, and thrown open to world's commerce. The British Goverm;-ient then declared war on China to extend trade still more, and when the smoke of battle had cleared a-way, the barriers against mercl1ants entering Shanghai, Ningp4, Fuchow, Foo and Amey, liad been battered down.8 With so open a·field before them Oriental merc'riants had little time to waste butting against stone walls in the Philippines, and foreign commerce rapidly drifted from the Archipelago. B,e£.Q....Il[!'@.!}~;;.s!,_ti9lllL.9.f_§._:i.Qi'Q_~.fl.Q .Q,.fi_ M~-~o - The Spaniards now grevi alarmed at the resulting stagnation of trade in the Islands 1 and sought to reattr~ct the merchants who were devoting their attention to China. extended to the Philippines by decree of July 26, 1832. It was composed 0£' one prior, two consuls, two subdelegates, one assessor, and one secretary. It took the place of the Tribunal del Consulado whtch was established by a royal decree of 1769. The Chamber of Connnerce ( Junta de Comercio} was created by a decree of the Superior Governnent of the Philippines February 1, 1835. Its personnel c0nsisted of the officials of the Tribunal of Commerce and .:'our merchants, appointed by the governnient. T11is ood:;r W3.S to discuss matters relating to navigation and corDEerc:r:, The aut ',ors apparently have mistakc3r.. t h3 'h ibunal of Commerce for tl-ie Chamber of Commerce. See Buceta y Bravo, 2.£• cit. $ - The opening of these ports and tne cession of Hongkong were results of t1,e first }1.nglo -vi--inese V1,Ta.r (18401842), which was concluded by the Treaty of rlan~ing, 1a42. Canton was one of the Chinese pDrts opened to foreign nations. The Treaty of Nanking removed many of the restrictions wrdch rampered the trade of foreigners in China. For one thing the intervention of the Hongkong merchants was eliminated. For another, a tariff schedule on imports was established on a permanent basis. -398The Government appointed Don Sinibaldo de Mas, later Spanish minister to China, to investigate and report on mercantile conditions in the Philippines. Ds l11ias did his work well. He was not a believer in the exclusive nature of the Spanish trade policy, and he saw with a clear vision that the Philippines_ must be placed on a rational commercial plane if they were to keep pace with gro•-1ing trade requirements. He obtained son:e startJ.ing data by comparing the Philip:)ines wit-t, Cuba, ·where commerce had been allowed a more natural development. Cuba, he found, with less than a million inhabitants did an annual business amounting; to 27,000 1 000 dollars, w~ile the P~ilippines, which in 1850 had a population of more t 11an 4,000,000 had less than 5,0v0,000 dollars of trade annually. He reckoned that if the commerce of tre PhiliniJines were Proportionate to that of Cuba, it would~amount to 350,000,000 annually. De 11.iaa recommended that Spain open other ports besides Manila, abandon the tobacco monopoly and encouraged irnniigration. Some time following De l'-'ias' invest:tgation, when the refo:cms indicated by him were beginning to be put into effect, the Superintendent of Customs at IIIJ:anila issued a report showing that the value of commercial business had increased one third. He observod in his report that "of the foreign merchants in l\fa:·1:.l.a, t1--e_ U;:1.:>j:,ed ~t e s O C Q.1 l.J?. i .w___t_b,g_K_i.r. s t _£1 a C _e w,;L!-2.....!11.G T '.L°tJ@Jl.J! third of t·'"le total V'.3.ll~.e oi exnor-ts. During the past year, the·t~onria;:ie-o·f ii.r.~ericanvessels entering and leaving Manila has bee~ 125,922, of English, ,..,i::. · d o r··-·.:>panis. · 'h , 33 , 1i::.7" t _,, 439 , an _, • Use of M::,cl_§:rn J~ric11ltural Implements~ Nicholas !,oney .. - The co::nmerc io.l triumphs oT-Gre"a."t-:s:r:itain on t'be Cr,inese mainland gave to t~,e Brit.if;h firn:s in the Philippines great prominence, and they gradually began to overcome the lead that the Americans then possessed. The Englis"hmen pressed t'l-,8:Lr advantage vigorously, and soon made ti-,emseJ.ves m2.ste:-s of tJ-ie trade of the lesser Islands of the Archipelago, through t'he introduction of modern sugar making rrachinery, sugar being one of the Archipelago's chief exports. ii.bout 1860, Mr. Nic'l-)olas Loney, a clerk in t 11e Scotch 1-iouse at l\'IaniJ.a of Ker 2.nd Company, resigned his position, and became the agent at Iloilo of a Scotch sugar macrinery company. Mr. Loney re- -399cognized the vast trade that could be done in sugar if the antiquated refining methods of the nntives were replaced by the modern,system and he sought to teach the notives of the Visayan Islands how to use the new machinery. He encountered mo.ny difficulties at first, for the Filipinos were conservative, and \·Jere reluctant to part with their old time processes of manufacture. Finally, .Mr. Loney offered t 1-,em t1-1e machinery on the .understanding that they were to pay for it only if they gained a greater profit by the new method. His suggestion that the price of the machines be refunded to him only out of the additional earnings of the natives, at last attracted some of the more enterprising natives, and to the delight and surprise of the Filipinos they discovered that they could make sugar easier and cheaper under t 1--ie new conditions than was possible formerly. Mr. Loney immediately assumed a position of great prominE:nce. He estab-· lished a company at Iloilo t~at became the strongest mercantile house outside Manila, and he was . appointed the British consular representative there. Mr.~-1t.&.YD.Q.l9-.§_ 1 Ri.£§. 'Exe ha}lg e Pr_:gj e et • - £.:~r. Thomas Reynolds, an American citizen, althoug,,, it was afterwards pretended that ,.,e was born in Lancashire, England, who was married, like Mr. Sturgis, to a Filipino lady of European descent, tried also to take adv&ntage of the opening of new ports, for the establishment of a Rice Exi::11ange in the port of Dagupan, northern Luzon, the nearest place to Hongkong. He invested at the port a very large capitaJ., made a quay, built ware 1-iouses, and everything was planned to convert Dagupan into one of the most important commercial centers in the Archipelago; but when he began to carry out nis scheme, the religious orders opposed him strenuously, on the plea that rie was dealing in rice, which was the principal food of the natives, and that he might endanger trie supply of the Islands by increasing prices or by exporting it. Thr.; real fact that tlie Friars dreaded his undertaking, because through it, he would have been able to compete with the local rice markets, . w11ic1-, vrnre supplied c1-.iefly from the Friars' Haciendas (Rice Estates). There was consequently-a-gr'eat COITiillei.~cial and industrial _ struggle between Mr. Reynolds and the Friars, accom- -400panied on the part of the Friars by the most ridiculous political accusations, and in the end, Mr. Reynolds was forced to give up his project. Colonizing Schemes of Forei~n Nations near the Phil_,;i._"0_plnes_,,- Great Britcti_n, cor1stdntly devising means to assist her trad2rs, atte1:1pted to establish a con~ercial base in the Sulu Archipelago, and endeavored to seize an island of the group for this purpose.9 The authorities at Manila regarded their sovereign ri.~~hts as being in dangert and forced the Sultan of Sulu to expel the l~nglisl1men. Britain thereupon departed, to console herself by securing a foothold in Sarawak as a preliminary to the occupation of northern Borneo. The British commercial activity served as a stimulus for the other traders. France made an effort to raise her flag over Basilan, one -of the southern islancts bordering Mindanao, b~t was c ompelled to abandon her designs.10 The imperialism of Spaniards in Manila was inflamed by: the British 9 - The British, through Sir James (Rajah) Brooke, obtained the territory of Sarawak, September 21·, 1841. In 1845, they acquired also the island of Labuan. Jn May 18491 Brooke negotiated with the Sultan of J olo for the conversion of Jolo into a British protectorate. The· negotiations, however, failed. See Montero y Vidal, 2£• cit., volume 3, chapter 6. 10 - The French attempted to acquire th0 island of Basilan in 1845. In February of that year, IvI. de la Grene entered into a treaty with tht~ Sultan of Jolo. whereby the latter ceded Basilan to the French for 100,000 pesos. The negotiations, however, were not brought to a conclusion due to the failure of the French Government to give the necessary financial backing to M. de la Grene. At this time, FraIJ.ce was much ensrossed in more pressing problems, dom~s· tic an~ forei~n, to attend to de la Grene's plan of territorial aggrandizement. For an account of this incident, see Montero y Vidal £.E.· cit., volume J, chapter 4. Montero y Vidal gives in that chapter, the texts of important docur.,-1ents which tell the inside story of the motives for the French attempt and of the reasons for its abandonment. -401triumphs, and one among them, Captain Carlos Cuarteron, employed as a local cclrrier between Borneo and the Philippines,· sought to secure Borneo as a trndo base for Spain. Cuart~ron gave up his sea lifP-, entered the CGtholic Church as a Priest, went to Rome, and obtaj_ned the appointment of Apostolic Deleg2te to Borneo. He worked strenuously to in-·. duce the f/[e.niln covernment to support his ambitious plan, but met with no success, r.;nd, c:it last, he died without cc:rrying out his project. America, i.f she were to maintain her commercial position in t:1e Far East, must secure and Oriental tra~e base of her own, and an attempt was rr..ade in lc36b to follow the idea of Cuarteron on behalf of the United States, by Mr. Moses, the American consul at Brunei, Borneo. Mr. Moses obtnined from the Sultan of Brunei a cession of territory, including practically the whole northern part of Borr.ea. He transferred the holding to an American trac.ing company, and a Mr. Torrey was sent to the Island to form a colony ~nf meke provision for commerciaJ. extension. ';['he undertaking met the same fate that befell the design of Captain Cuarteron, and for a similar reason. 'I'he United Stc1tes government was t,oo concerned 1,1ith the reconstruction period following the War of Secession, to give any attention to so remote a subject as Borneo, and the American Trading Company, denied t D.c'lt J,overnmental assistance which had supplied such waterial help to the neighboring British commercial settlements, abar:donec: its ambitious scheme. Shortly after the departu:ce of the Arne ricans 1 a Britis;:1 syndicat,2 was formed to take over the Am.erican rights, and when the Americans demanded payment for the cession, they were curtly told they had no claim, as their title hnd lapsed. There was then no commercial influence at Washington stron3 enough to induce the Unitec:. States government to assert the contrary, and tb.us without the payment of a penny, North Borneo was changed frorn American to British territory, ·.1hich it has remained ever since. The Secret of EQ.gland's Commercial Success ~n the PhiliRQ_iric s. - Besides obtaining first place in the export business of the Archip 3lago, Great Britain through her possessions near the Philippines was able to make herself mistress of the 1 -402Archipelago's import trade as well. The tariff schedu1e at Manila was framed, not only to encourage Spanish imports, but also Spanish carrying trade. There were high duties on goods brought into Manila aboard foreign vessels and low ones arriving under the Spanish fla8, while there was a specially low impost on merch::1.ndis c reach.:i.ng the Islands from the local trading stations in the Orient, British merchants took adv.'.lntage of this, by consigning th'.3ir goods sent from Europe not to 1VIanila but to Singapore, or Hongkong and from there having them ferried across to the Philippines in Spanish ships. The advantage gained by this maneuver was so important,. that it was useJ.ess for any trader except the Spaniards, to compete with the Eng1ishn:en in the import trade, and even the Spaniards were forced into a bad second place. Establishment of British Br.=mks .- These matters were aiI-sorious attacks on America's trado sup;_..,e ... macy in the Philippines and Grer tt Britein soon delivered a death blow -:,o the commercial r;i.valt3 of the Englishmen through the medium of the two official British Banks in the Far East, the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and Chinn and the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, on0 of whose principal objects was the furtherance of British political influences in the Orient. 0 Their Ope:r~tJon~.- In 1873 both institutions end0avor2d to e:xtEJnd their operations to Mnnila. The Char·cered Bank was allowed ac.ncitt:.arice but the Spaniards refus~d similar permission to the other, which, nevertheless managed to socuro business in the Islands th1..,ough an ag(~nt at Manila. The Spanish banks did not regard either bank with favor, and both, thinKing t:1ey might have to r8linquis11 their operations at a moment's notice-1 arrunged with an English bou.se in Mo.nila, Smith, BaJ.J. and Co., to act for them in the event of a ;Jnd.den 1·ctr('lat being necessary. T~1e ae:ent of th8 C}12rter'nd Bank. who was the first in tfie field, started by adopting different methods f,rom those 1wed by thcj Manila merchant banks. Instead ,of rE;fus:Lng to accept land as sufficient security for loans, as did the other banks, he offered, evon against his charter, to take real estato, and he charged less int(3rest than did the merchant banks. The policy of acceptlng land -403mortgages attracted much business to the bank. The natives were quite willing to give land that no o·ne else would havo to thE::_British banks, for it was useless to the natives, and when their loans became due, they permitted the banks to foreclose, and seize the land, while they moved away to obtain from the Spanish government other land, fre0 of cost. Failure of American F1.rms. - This method of doing business, though far seeing;as fut 1-1rc events proved, entailed ·considerable loss at first, ~md for thDt reason was not followed by the merctant banks. The British merchants who secured the busin8ss that the British banks diverted from the Americqns and the other foreign traders, felt no inconvenience, but the rest of the merchants were hard pressed. The natives deserted them for the better terms securable at the hands of the British, and finally, in 1875, Russell and Sturgis were forced into bankruptcy. The announcement of the failure ·brou,!ht trade, in Manila temporarily to a standstill. Foi a generation the great American firm had kept in the shadow nll other mercantile houses in Mcl.niJ.2, e..nd the establ:.shment had come to be regarded c1s tho fountain head of all the Vc).rious commercial streams that had forced thc~ir way through the Archipelago. It had ne7er been believed that the Americans could be forcod out of business by their British rivals and there is nothing to indiGate that they would have been but fo:~ the ov8rpowering assistanc,3 riven to British merchants in t:ie Orient by the British government. It was the policy pursued by the cornmE;rcial agents of the Hritish Foroign Office that forced Russell, Sturgis into bankrup~cy, nnd as the power exerted by England was entirely J.eg:itirnate, Americans can d2plore only that those in authority at Washington did not, give equal att.FJnt:.on to the trade battle that was being ,~ waged in i,1anila. ~ After the fall of Russ ell, Sturz is, the United States continued to be reprcJsented in Menila by the other American house, Poele, Hubbell r.~ Co. It hold no longer, because its interests were not so complex, but its existence caused the En:zlisr,men to continue their right against the Americans, until, in 1887, Peele, Hubbell gave up the contest and went out of business. -404-- The fight had .been a costly one, and the British firms are said to have lost a vqry large sum before they finally rid themselves 0£ their great opponents. As soon as they had the field to themselves, the Englishmen retrurned to the old plan of issuing loans, and the cost· of the fight was ultimately borne by the natives. · The victory was decisive, for since then, Briti::;h comme:rcial houses have reigned supreme in the Philippine. Islands. 2. Economic and Social Results of the Opening of the Philippines to Foreign Nations. (a) Economic and Social Development .J/ The astonishing development of the population in the last century was coincident witb. the economic advance of the islands, the two lines of growth clearly having progressed together. The first quarter of the nineteenth century brought events to the Philippine;s that were desti.ned to revolutionize society and industry. Mexico obtained her independence from Spair. in 1820, and after that all commurdcation betwoen the f·hilippines ancl. what had been an over-colony ceased. Trade betwoen Spain and the Philippines was not carried on by vussels sailing around the Cap0 of Good hope. The last Philippine galleon had returned from Mexico in the year 1814. 2 The Royal Philippinb Company, which held a monopoly of trade, ended its life in 1835 without having achieved either financial succ<JSfJ or lasting economic benefits to the island,s. This was followed two years later, in 1837, by thG opening of the port of Manila to foreign trade.) This is the decisive 1 - Barrows, "History of the· Population," Cens_us of 12.Ql, Vol, I, PP• 445-h46. 2 - 1816 according to i,Ias, and 1815 according to ~Iontero y Vidal. 3 - On Dec. 14, 1837, a sch~dule of tariff duties on goods brought to Mcmila wr~s promulgated. ( See Buceta y Bravo, QQ• Q!i•, Vol. I). -405date and event in th(3 history of Philippine industry and commerce. How little the islands had sharod in the trade of the world is to be seen from the statistics of the yenr 1810. Imports in that year amounted to 5,329,000_ ,;>esos, and mor,3 than half of this was silver sont from Mexico. Imports from the Unit8d States and frorn J!Jurope, incJ. uding .3paj_n, had amounted to 175,000 pesos. 'l'h8 ,~xport3 for the sn.rne y8.JY' were evGn less, the b2lanc 0 of tre.de being aga :trwt the Arcrlipelago. This amounted to L~, 795,000 pc-so:,, but of this amount over a million and et half was Moxica.n silver exported to Chine:. The whole :Jrnount of ex:oorts to Europa and to the Unitad Stntcs was only a quarter of a million per:;os. 'I'here was practically no ,:3xportation of those great staples - hemp, tob,~1cco, 1:.1u.gar, coffoe, and copra, which subsequently enriched the islands and fo[!tered this phenomenal growth of population. In 1831 the expr.;>rtation of hemp amounted to only 346 tons 1 but the immediate effect upon production of the opiC;ning of the port of Manila to foreign trade is seen in the exportation six years later of 2,585 tons. By 1858 tr.:.e cxportat ion of this 9.rticle alone had risen to 27,500 tons. Of this amount nearly two-thirds went t~ the United Stateo for the rigging of those ships which mad0 thfl Ame:r:Lcan NElvy famous for spei':,d and daring throughont tho f ir.st half of the last century. Of ,sugar the axport tn 1858 amount~d to 557 (sic.) piculs, of which more than half v,1 ent to Great Br·itain. In 1814 gent:ra1 permission had been given to foreigners to establish trading houses in Manila, and by 185,3 t.hero were 15 such established, of which ? wer<::: Enr;1.isn and 3 American. ( Seo Bowring, "A Visit to the Philippine Is·lands. 11 ) In 1855 t~hree other ports weru opensd to foroign commerce - Sual in Pan6 a.'.:dnqn, to promot,e tho exportation of the ·surplus production o~ rice; Iloilo and Zamboanga; and in 1865 Cebu likewiEJe wus m;::ide an open port. From these dates tho prosperity of the Philippines advanced t:;tendily and rapidly without interruption until the outbreok of th8 Philippine revolution six years ago. To this period is due the propagation of the hernJJ fiolds of Ambos Canmrinus, Albay, and Sorsogon; the planting of the innumerable coconut groves; the sug-ar haciendas of Parnpc1ngtt rmd Negros; the tobacco fields of Cagayan and the Iloco provinces; the coffee of Batangas, and the utilization everywhere of the specially ad.:1pted soils for the production of these admirablo articles of trade. -406One thing is to be noticed, and is important in estimating the future development of the islands. The money that was invested here was not brought in by capitalists but was made here. Haciendas arose from small beginnings, and this continued prosperity apparuntly suffered no diminution or check until it was interrupted·by the ravages and desolation of warfare. One point must be noticed, howavHr, in regard to the addition of this weo.1th to the islands, pnd thut is that it was not evenly distributed among the population but WGnt to enrich certain famili(.:JS, largely Spanish ar.d mestizos, 3.E3 well c1s the old native ariE;tocracy - the 11 principo.les. n, Tb.e grr!at mass of the po9ulation secured few gains or material benefits from this increased wealth of the archipelago. It was during this period o·f prosperity that measures were adopted for the laying out of pueblos and the erection of public edifices, and during this time the fine homes of the wealthier class of the native population were constructed. ( c) Commercial and Agricalturnl Progj:'ess •1 Taking the increase of exports as an indication of greater agricultural and comrnr.;;rciaJ_ e.ctivity, we find ~hat, with the opening of the port3, exports increas~d; and these now consi8te4 of the product~; of tlrn country, ins toad of rnarn1f c:. et Trod goods brouzsht from elsewhere in the O.cient. B,1 1839, tho Philippines exported 2,674,?20 pesos of her own products, as·against 500,COO pesos in lf110. Su:~ar in 1782, w&s the only product which was attracting any attention, bocausc at t,he time, t,;d.rty-thousand piculs of it had been oxportec.; in 18/+0, 146,661 piculs were exported; in 1854, tho amount had increased to 566,371, almost four times g:redter than 1840; and, in 1857, the amount reached 711+,059 piw• culs. Similarly, the amount o.f hemp E:xpr):ctGd in-· 1 - Benitoz, "The Old Philip,iines _Indu,strial Dc:ve: looment" in Craig-Benitez, £.hi1J..£J2,illi,L.t.£Qgress Prior -t;,o 189§_. -407creased, in spite of the fact that it found its way in the world's market for the first time only in the early part of the nineteenth century .2 The same effect that was observed in connection with the opening of Manila followed that of the other ports. The production of the regions around the new ports increased as shown by export statistics, and commercial activity was stimulated, as shown in the greater movement of ships. For example, Sual in 1a57 sent abroad twelve ships with rice, and two hundred and twenty-five ships to Manila, also loaded with rice; in 1860, sixty ships went abroad, and one hundred and seventy-two to Manila, loaded mostly with the same cargo. Again, al tho in the __ first three or four years there were no marked increase in her exports, Iloilo by 1859 began to show signs of increasing productivity.3 Its total value of exports, which in 1858 amounted to 82,000 pesos, had increased to 1,000,000 pesos in 1863. 2 - Azcarraga (.Q.£. 2it.) gives the following figures for hemp. Piculs ~X£0I~ 1840 1845 1850 1853 1857 ---~----------- 83,790 -------------- 102,490 -------------- 123,410 -------------- 221,518 -------------~ 327,574 1a5a -------------- 412,502 3 - The following figures show the trend of exports from Iloilo. lbid. Fo£9ign Countries Piculs of Sugar 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 ---------9,344 ---------- 40,176 ---------- 44,256 --------- 102,464 --------- 170,832 Manila Piculs of Sur;ar. 77,488 72,592 29,312 98,912 eo,ooo -408Furthermore, the opening of Iloilo encourGged production in the island of Negros. Previous to the new era the conditions there were described thusf 11 • • • before the happy event that we o.re considering, that island was uncultivated, tld.nly populated, und above all, without any kind of production to keep comri1erce alivG; besides the Governor, the Alcnlde Mayor, and the curates sent by the religious orders, there were no other Jpaniards; only one Eurorean, a French doctor by the name of Gaston, heid. settled there, cultivatj_ng sugar cane, and now and then send some car11 ••• Af-~er the oponing of the port goes to Manila. of Iloilo, the 4,000 piculs of sugar produced in Negros in lg56 had increasgd to 100,000 by 1a64 for exportation; there were 25 Europeans in tho same year, 7 machines run by steam in the towns of Bucolod, Jv1inuluan, cmd Bo.go, and 45 run by animal power. Similar advancement chcu·&ct(~rized the other partf; of the.islands. (c) Social and Political Results, 1 R~turning to the Real Compania, in spite of the protection and preroga.-tiv8S granted by the monarch, it declined from year to yoar. Badly managed, making absurd commercial operations, as it followed no truu mercantile principle, but operated along unwieldy, complicat0d and selfish odm:i.nistroti ve lines, the Gompany was a complete failure putting an end to its busiress in li:1]0, in whlcl1 its rights and privileges vJ8re decl::ired expired, leavj_ng the port of Manila de ,jnre fft de fg__r,to opf;n to foreign commerce and navi.5 ation. If such tra:ns forma. t ion W.3S convenient to tho interests of the Filipino people, you can imagine that it was not ;:;y any means to the irrt:.rorests of 1.~ ' . . pri. +,,!ie pri• vi·1 ege d C.Le ss, j': or t.h e re:_:ison tn.-:1.t t .cu=nr nit ivo methods of acquiring wealth had come to an end, True economj_c 1 if e demand .:jd freedc,m of work and freedom of exchang E~. Freedom of work hurt the social class which lived off its exploitation under the protection of 1 - Dr.Pnrdo de Tavera, QE.• cit. -409the powers and of the law; production excepted from their hands and the pr1ras it ic,11 methods of the exploiters came to an end; the freedom of exchange also took commerce out of. the same privile[r,ed cJ.ass and placed it at th() di.spo.sition of otLen, bettE:-:r qwdif ied for it. No change of more tr::m:::; cendcmtal and beneficent results for the Filipino people could have been made. Commerce was to ce::1s e boirnt a force for exploitation. · But you already ~now what happens with every . I- is • . ' vntu . 1-- preJlL • d.ice r:m d c h ange:::i, J.v a ..J w,:q~:l rr:'!C8J.·veo pr 1Jvokes hostility, as i11 .fr·ont of it risi38 the tremendous fortress of tradition and custom, an obsta~le which, 6ertainly, once overcome, will serve as a refuge to the new acquisition of our society, which will in turn be kept as a tradition and custc::n. The encourtJ/:ement given by the Roal Comp:::.fiiu to develop i.ndu.s trial and ngriculral production backed by tbc money it had distrtbuted in the provinces with that purpose ho.d at J.ength to produce their results and if the_ Cor:ipany did fail, on the other hand, thanks to it, Philippine production made considerable Rrogress. 1sihen tho mother country imposed freedom of trade, the majority of the dominntors received that provision very favorably; they wisted for a less rigid sequestration, but not its abolition, for they rightly feared that competition would destroy t.tv3ir old system of exploitation wtich wos so convenient, so sure and so productive. The ffbrutes l.oaded with 2"old 11 p:o.vo a nroof of their intelligence and of thci~ ospi;ations~by sending their children' to Manila to be educ,-;_t(::;d, buying furniture, mirrors; ar·t.icl.e,s of luznl'y fo1· their homes and persons; buyi.ng pianos, carrir?es, objucts imported from the United States and Europe which come their wc;1y, owing to the foreign t:r.s1de. Tl'H::;e articles caused a revelation which produced a rqvolutlon in the public conscience, thanks to that mer>itable revolution of an economic character which permitted the only possible development - material developrnr)nt. The necessities of commerce, demonoed not by the poor but by the powerful, were attended to; for -410that reason roads were made, bridges were built, new hi8hways of communication were opened, public snfety was organized in a more c~fficient munner, the r:1bu,ses of the dominators had greater publicity and therefore were fewer and more combating, the mail servico v1as . d , opaninr c, • d s Dnd_ o t],., · · · ' l... e t_,o J_mprove ,Her -~=·1 1 ipinos WGre ao place themselvec in contact with tho civilized world, emerging from their prolonged and harmful sequer~tration as a result of the effort of economic impulses. ( We emerge from that period owinr; to purely natural causes. Thon:! is no doubt that for rel ip;ious pur~oses, tutelor sequestration did not offer any cause of comprer_;,sion; on ~ho contrary, it vias the r, 7• • , mos t a d equa t e cause ror re~1g1ous worK. nowevar, in spite of being contrary to the artificial policy followed by the King of Spain and his representatives, tr.iat period could not s us+-,ai.n itself, fallir1g mrt;urally, b(3cause it was contrary to tlw nature of the laws which rule h~man progr~ss; because it was contrary to economic progress, If we had not emereed there from we wot;ld not have progres:;, 8d; the f:re-;dom of trade in openj_ng for us the doors of material nl·~cerl us 1·n th,·, way of' ou·~, i·n.+-e.l}c,c:-11" Pr·ocrress b . ' _t-· progr0ss and in all its fullness, Admittodly we do not here witness a novel spectac:J_e in the 1ife of' humanity, but we see repeuted in our coun'~17 the sam(; process by means of which, during tho enti:cc; history of mankind, man has evAr marched from t br::: cc;n~ue:.:t of materiaJ_ we1.fare tu th""J conquest o:: int011 ectuDl .co t • 1 and mora 1 progruss; _._rom t1e acqu::.sition o:.: rca~crJJJ. 1 n1."·r1.0· 1·11o~·t r,c•c,·,11<·-i~,J rl· ece"""l'ti"0.:• ....,,u, 'or:,·r-ir ,..,,,., __ .... ("' wi"-t'·-h ·tl.-1·e 1. . U CJ._, wl;ich • is nutrition, t~ thos; of a higher order, b2sed one upon anotii81', in a natural order determined by a concatenation of causes 2nd effects which artifici/11 means, voluntary or unconscious, placncl to change': its course, ha··11c:: only served to pa:cn.lyze or re::;ard. T' 0. I ,_.l 1· ,.)W .1 1. .J. '.J , 1 ' • ..1 • ...,J ··'-• • -C:-~ '...J ~ .. U 1 ] . " V'-lt...)G . ..J_ .• Freedom of trado had to c harw:e ou.r economic state, but the upper cla SS, educnt.ed ;u:c! er '.__. he influence of the ideas of the first epo~L, h~J neither prepa:~ntion to avc::il itself of the novu1ty nor aven the disposition to understand i t:3 benefits. It .w2s made from the same mould; it,2 economic combinations, placed at the lov,iest level rnc\nur1l production, in··· riustry, agriculturE:, becausr:; thuy had been accustomed to look upon theM as the uctivities proper to the lowest and least considered classes in society, -411Commerce was on a higher lev~l, practised by the rovernors themselves, the alcaldes mayores civil, military, and reli?:;ious authod.t ies, protected moreover by monopolies, privileges and exemptions which gnve it the full character of an aristocratic institution. Un the top level were the ecclesiastic, military and 1egnl profession vJhld1 constituted the aristo0rc1tic professions. Thus was constituted a spir"i.t appropriate to that of the period of sequestration, and it may be said thnt the colonial policy of thot t:i.rne h1d gairwa its triumph. Commorce, even on a small. scale, is rather an intellectual occupat~on; it doos not require much work and at. times almost none; it rc~quir8d calcu1ation, foresight, honesty or trickery according to the times and cases; it is, in short, an activity having two 'moral aspects diarnetric.::.illy opposed, according to whether it operates under oppressive laws or under free institutions. In the first case it exploits, deceives barefootedly, oppresses, uses ~nd abuses its privilegsd situation; in the second case, it wins by procedure of an elsvated character, such as square dealing, exc1ctnecrn in cc:1rrying 011t agreements to buy and sel]., g6od quality of products and merchandise dealt in, comp(')t it ion-in short, it is foun<i ed on the interest o:C the nrod ur: ors rnd the purchases too, and j_n this manner 1-s caJ.culatecl to ·win the confidence and tho cue:;tom of ead1 other. 0 Freedom of trade was bound to b~ing capital and active people from the outside of tte r:rcbipe-· lago. Capital would be of use to develop production and, rwturally, cor:sumption, anrJ c,xpo1,+-,c1tion. Persons who came freely brought new irlaas, new msthor:ls, ne;rJ morol and int ell oct 13l n30ds, wit ho u.t the support of privileges which se~ved for exo1oitation, so that such men had to influence favor&bly the general progress of the Philippines. 1 The first result was the collision of the new arrivals with the exploiters of the o1~ ordur, wbose ' ]r d vi .l1J.cn • 1 • pea c er u 1 poss eso ion 01,-, a __ 1 ve 1 y-.,oor su11.., r.3 d them, because nobody questioned it or oisturbed it, was suddenly threatened by the competltion of more active, mor0 industrious, hetter prepared and richer indi7iduals, supported by fh·ms located in the most j_mportant c enters of the comm.ercie1l world. In the r, I •.,_ -412same' manner as by the arrival of the ,Spaniards, the old Filipino caciqur.rn who dominated during the period of tuteJ.ar seauostration found them.s0J.ves immediately supplanted crn.d converted into sornothin2,; Jower than the new caciques of an economic order. They understood that such s vpremo cy vJould p:i ve tliem supremacy in eV(Jrything, To defend their position they had recourse to the ant i--f nnd.gn sentiments of the entire society; frJreignc:n; had alvvays been regardod as the enemies of Spain and of God; they must also be the enemies of the Filipinos, The crusade was not new, it has been used before with excellent re:::mlts at the time of J:i:nglish domination. This campaign was hardly storteci when the cholera for the first time made its appearance in :l9r:iila, Taking advantage of thclt e7ent, which v1as a1so providential, the rumor was started that the foreigners had poisoned the waters of the Pasig, vd.th the rosul ts that in 1820 the people of Manila exterminated the forei3ners who were then residing at the capital. Recommend at ions, favor, and reJ.a tionship served in the old socia: ordor to SC;cure ocC(li)C::ition of an official charact-or; eVC:lry governor a:c:ri ved in Manila, as is mentioned by all chroniclers of the ·sime, accomp.<:lnied by a numerous following of pnra.sitos, friends, relations, godsons, pa,0os, ;:i.nd f:1vorites incapable of doinr~ anything usefuJ., wr10 vrnro J.ator placed by their patron :5.n alcald ias, e:mcomi:mdas, offices of every kind in which each of them developed his faculties for exploitation, as best un1erstood by him, to acquire a fortune by the maans ~hat I have alread:'/ mentioned. i\1011, men wbo r0pre"H:nterl the new typo of social 2uthnrities werG ~at~rolly insensible to the recomnwnd:,\Jdons for f,nor as regards the agents and employees necess:L":' t0 corry on their bus :'..riess, whom they 1::ou~,;ht ernonf ct pc:r,sons who were re~lly quelified by their intnlJ.igence, activity and morality. One of the causes of thf.; fa.iJure of the celebrated Real Compafiia de Fil:i.pina[) 1A '.1s preci.uely tho incompetent force thc,t managed the bue inoss in the IsJ.c1nds, selected in Spai. 11 not. on account of pcrsonctl au::i.1 ::.fie at ions but by th0 int ri.r:ues of favor and polltical recommendatj_on. In tli0 new commercial and nconomic lif P- the:re were sought those men of useful thour(bts recommended by G(:mflral Basco, 1 -413and the men so furnished found positions, nr, freely '-rnd on their own account, est&blished themselves in the n0w activity which transformwl our soci0ty. During the previous epoch the so-c~lled natu- ral resources constituting the extractive industries, consisting of the collectio~ of the spon~aneous products of nature, werc3 E::xp::;_oitecl, to the extent that the freedom of trade brought ~bcut the development of agriculture ·wtich has alreadJ bec-m initiated by the Real Compa.fiia. In Iloco::3 indiri:u wa~3 made, in Batangas, Parnpanga, Bulacnn, Lnguna, 2nd the Bisayas su,o;ar cane was cul+~i'latGd and r~ugar was made; in Albay, abnca ~as produced. Vigan, Taal, Balayun, Batangas, jJ.lbay, Nu,:;ve Ca.c1-;res, Cebu, Molo, JarCJ, Iloi1o, began to be coverr:)c. with so1idly r:onstructed buildings; their wealthy citizrms ·,vo'JJ d come to Manila, make purchases, become acquainted with the great merchants who entertained them i.n tneir q'wl ity as customers, whose trade they n~eded; they visited the Governor-General, ·who wo1J.1d rccei vr:; them a.ccord ing to the po.sit.ion that t:n,.::ir mc)ney rtav~; they came to know ti-10 justices of the Suprc'Ille :'.:;nurt, tbe provincials of reli1;5.ous orders; they brBhed up as e. rosul t of the:;.r contact. with t,he peoplr:1 CJf the capit&l and on returning to thuir pu8blo Ui,ey took in their hearts and miYids with them tLe ~erm of what was consequently ccilled s·ubverrJive ideas and later stil.1. filibusterismo. 3. Other Aspects of Philippine Ma Gcrial Progress Road Construction and Iw~rovement of Communication tasilj~ti.es .J_ D. Pascual Enrile y AJcedo, was ti.pprJinted to succeed Ricafort, Governor and Captain Gen~ral of the Philippines, Deeember,1830. 1 - Excerpts from J\iontero y Vidul, .QQ• ci!_., vol. '21, and vol. 3, ChaptEff'S 5, 6, 9 and :i.o. -41'1-A man of keen observation and education, Enrile began to study the country as soon as he arrived in the Philippines. In 1829 he visited the principal provinces of Northern Luzon, not as a governrnent official, but as a priv,Jte citizen. He was accompanied, in the cap::icity of a,ssistant, by a young military en-. gineer, D. Jose Marin Pefiarc1nda, to wr1om in the expedition he entrusted various difficult _tasks, such ciS the survoy of the trail f.re;rn IJ.oc08 i:~orte to Cc:.rayan by wa7 of Mount Po.tatat E nd Garabclllo d1c:l Norte. renaranda drew iti.neruries and pJ.0.11~3 for this tr[.iil. 1 The knowlodge go.ined regarding the nature, needs and situa~ion of the above-mentioned provinces was of va~ .ue to Enril (~, w11en he 1JPcame Go,rnrLor, in 1 his efforts to carry out his plans for th3 ~aterial welfare of the Archin 10J.ago. In the attainment of these he dedicated, ~uriiis five y~ars, his talent, initiative, and pcrsever~nce, with a zeal worthy of the highest prais(,. _ To carry out his plan of ma ter::U1J. d evr:-Jlopmont, ~nrile corrected_ the ex;stlng plans and p~epar~d a general map of trio A::.~chip'j_;_ng:o; he latur Dad tnoce great high.ntys of f-;orthe rn Gnd :3outhern ~u?ion constructed together vJit;_1 various brc,:nchr;3 to them, built a multitude of bridrse.s and improved the conditions of certain towns. Pefiaranda lrnlped Er:rile in the carrying out of the vast program of public works. AftE.':r making the survey we have noted, he madA another detailed ono of all the navig8ble rivers and streams of Pangasinan, m&king maps of the sa,ne; he 7isit ud anuw the grand ~ordillera of Luzon and tr8versed th9 roEion from San Nicolas~ in the pr0vinc8 of I~ocos, tb the missions of Ituy~ in Cagayan, in search of the 2 - .Tttty-and Paniqui were edrly missions established in the province of Cagayan during the first ygars 0f the 17th century. Some of the towns in the presont provinces of Nue~ Vizcay2. and Isabr3la od.c:inally w2rs inclu.ded in t,Lose missions, About the time PofiD.rando. vis itsd these regions, t11ose missions were constituted as follows: Mission of Ituy: Aritao, Dupax Bambang, Bayornbong I,Iission of Pa.niqui: LuwaL,u17:, Bagabag, ,... .., .. • • ,, n ')',:, d •:, r, •:· n .JnlJ..g, lu:.::::·"'·u,cd., Cauayan, Calam8niugan, -415easiest and shortest route betwe0n the two provinces. He then proceeded to study the host mean3 of pr8vonting the floods from lakes Car.arom and Manj abol in Pampanga, and traced a new rout0 that was beyond the reach of those floo<lA. He latur visited tlie distant Batancs and Babuycnes Islnnfs tp study their condition, neeri and menns of devcJloping thum and on his return he tr:i V"-)!'S ed the :s rand CordilJ.ur3 from Tuguegarao, through the territory of the Hild Calaus ond Apayaos, to Dine;ras ( Iloco:J Norte} in search of 8 possible direct rout,) betweer1 t;.-ie mad.time coast of the <Jest and the vast 2nd r~.ch rr3gions which now constitute the provinces of Nu8va --Vizcaya, Isal)u1D. and Gagayan. 0 Enrile conceived the idea of solving the difficult problem of establishing m8uns of communication in th8 interior, and ho commissioned P0f:-1randa to survey the Cordillera from Siniloan in the province of Laguna, to Binafigonan de Lampon, on th0 Pacific coast, to vis it Polillo on the Pacific, and to ~t~dy the long coast of Eastern Luzon up to the present d L;tr ict of Baler::. Of more importance was the itinerary, now e~isting, of the mail service ::i.n the S Juth by way of Tayabas and Camarines, the use of' whid: up to that time was considered irnpra.ct::i.ca.blo. A similar survey was made and itinerary dravm up betvrnen Balanio and the strategic port of 3ub ic, Zambal (?S. 1 Having completed satisfactor·ily thes(~ tc1sk, Pefiaranda occupied himself 11-Jith the co:jst:r·1Iction of a fort at Burias; with campairning aga.·.nst a bond of bandits which nestled at 1·iount San Crjst:.obal, capturing the band and killing tl1e lesdcr; with the 8Stablishment of an outpost et Uambahan on the side of that mount a in; in the c0nstruct ion of a road uniting that post to Maj ayjay; and with the inspection of the forts and the t, elegraph systun of th,3 coasts and of the provi.ncinJ.. n;arit.5.rne forces. While engaged in these tasks, he prepared a sketch which included the southwestern part of Luzon, from Cavite to Albo.y. In 1834, he commenced fd.milar work for th~ establishment of wec3kly service vvith all the provinces of the 1';orth; and for the f..)Stc.bl iE.: hment of a me.in -416road in the difficult passes of Agayayos, in Ilocos Sur, and Rabon, in Prtngasinan. On the 14th of May of that year, Pofiaranda was appointed Corrogidor pol it:5_co-militat and subdelegate of £i'inanco of A1bc1y, or Governor of that province, and, during his odm:inistcntion, important road~, were conntructed in the province, bridges, and public edifices built and agriculture develoosd. For those merit,orious servir;es the inLc1b:ftDnts of Al.bay have perputuatnd hie n:emory Dy crest:Lng, a few ycaI\S 2.fter his death, a monument in the plaza of the capital of the province. Enrile was one of the most intelli~cnt and industrious governors that the Philiouines-over h~d. 'I'ho country OWC;S to him transcundentr.11 mUt8ria.J,. improwcments of the utmost vc.lue, such c.ts thEj highways of Luzon, which have faciJ.itated traffic betwecrn provinces, at the sar.ie time putting them into postal communication with one another hy means of the postal routes established by him. .1-l.lso it is :indebt,ecl to him for the administratian of scientific UDd orderly rules and proc 8dures in all the br:Anches thnt have contributed to the Jevelo~ment of the general welfare, and h8ve increaced considcra.bly the public 1rrnalth. Agriculture, commerce, na vigatiori al so ex:ocrienc ed the bensficial results of this illust,rious govrJrnor' s judicious management, registering during his adrnj_nistration rapid pror.;ress, thanks to the mc,esm~es enacted by 1lim which conduced to their r:ute.dal development. (b) Campaigns Against Piracy, lfh7-Ht51 About the midclle of the nineteenth Ctcntury, durj_np; the adrrdnis~rations of Claverie: and Urbiztondol the G01ermnent wagE~d vi[~orous campa:tgns Dgainst plrc:c,cy. Th0 ca.rn~.:.1.igns mav be s7id to be 3n outgrowth of thu at~erpts of certain European powers to g~in tcrritori3l footjo]ds in the Phil ip_oines_. .As pointed out tv" Heid.dor 211d Ar1 son in their ) 0 ,., rl, ( J • Commerc :;_al Pr91-:1:t.2i~, 1v En&:Lrnd, in 1 c 49, t l.u·ou[')l. James hnJa 1 - Na red.so Claveria, 184L-1849; Antonio de U:rbiztondo, 1850-1853. 2 - Vid e, sup:£_a. -417- Brooke, sought to bring the Suitnn of Jolo under British protection. At about the samo time, the F'rench, through Monsieur de-la Greno, tried to obtain from the Sultan of Jolo the cession of Busilan. These attempts were serious threats against the territorial unity and integrity of the PhiJippines. The campaigns launched by tho Philippine Government between 1848 and 1851 :i.n the l\:ohanm,.edc1n occupied areas of the Philippines were inspired by the desire to safeguard the Philippines against the imperialiEJtic desir:ns of England and France. The campaigns may be viewed c1.lso as a phase of the commercial progress of the Philippines. The expansion of commercial activities following the opening of the Philippines to foreign trade created a demand, not only for t,he improvement of commercial facilities, but also for greater security and freedom from bandits and pirates on the highways and sea -lanes of thfJ Philippin<_js. The campaif!:ns were undertaken to make the lines o.f communication of the country by sea ::md by land safe for those who wanted to use them for commerce or for travel. They were important steps tci.kGn by the Government to meet the needs and conditions arising as a result of the opening of the Philippines to foreign nations. (i) Oyanguren a~d the Conquest of Davao. 1 In 1847, a Spaniard D. JosA Oyanguren realized an accomplishment which has brc,ught ho nor to his name, - the conquest of Davao. We prc~.f er to let another speak of this accomplishment.2 "Oyanguren was a native of Guipvzcoa. He came to the Philippines in 1825, a refugee from the persecutions which he encount.ercod in Soa5.n on account of close adherence on his part to the consti.tution8.l regime. In 1830 he was in Car,1gc:! ( now S J.rigao) engaged in commerce and navigation along the coasts of Iviindanao. 1 ------1 - .Montero y Vidal, .££..•. Qi t. 2 - La Isla de Mindanao, su histq.r:i§_y__su est~do 12re§.ent e, CQ.!L~lgunas reflecciones a_c erc_§_d ~L.§:\d 2orven~.r? oy D• Agustin Santayc::ma, former director of the local administration in the Phtlippines, Madrid, 1862. -/+18"In 1840 he was appointed judge of first instance in the populous province of Tonda. Upon hearing of thE~ cession Ly the Sultan of Mindanao of th0 region of Davao, Oyanguron plAnned to make effective the control of thot region. He proposed to CaptainGern::n·al D. Narciso C:Javrc;:c~.a that he be provided with arms and munitions; that he be given the comm.::md of the territory for a long ~Jerir)Cl .wit/1 exclusivd privilege to tr:1de; that in return Le would subjugate, with men of his o·tJn choosin.2: ,,nd provided fo:r by himself, the whole re~ion, fro~ Cape-San Agustin to Sarangani point; that he would expel or pacify the Moros inhabiting the region, found Christian communities, provide them 1,Jith ugricu:i.tural implements, ::ind establish means of communication with the gentiles of the interior of the Isle.nd, cttracting them to civilized life and to sur.;mi:3sion to Spanish authorities. "Governor Claveria recGived with much satisfaction the proposal, for it agreed so well with his plens regarding the reduction of tho wild tribc)s and the extermination of piracy. »aut before giving formal acceptance, Claveria referred the matter to the Aud!enci8, in accordance with the laws of the Indias. Pere the project encountered some opposition on D ccount of tlJ.e long period of control which Oyanguren deffi'J.nded, GS well. as tho exclusive privileges to tr~~e, whjch were considered extraordinary 2nd without· prE3Ceden-i-:,. The Audiencia, tterofore, sanctioned the project, with the stipulation that tlv~ te:cmE; sub1td.tt,3d by Ovc:nR:uI'E;n should not be considered as a contract ~ifh Eno Government, but merely a.s a conce:c::-:.oion £_;ranted to him for a. 1 imited period, with the usual 1 imj_·t.c1t irn1s. Accordingly, Governor Claveriu by dccre0 of Fobruary 27, 1847, granted to Oyanguren for ::1 pe:r_;JJC~ of 10 years control of the territory he mipht conquer in the region of Davao, with exclusivo trade privileges dud.r:g ~::-hG first six yem.'s; furnislwd Lim with a.rtilJ.ery, rifles anri munitions; Emd nutho:r.•ized hi.m to organize~ company of soldiers of h~s own ~hoosing. It was agroerl. t,hat the capj_taJ. of t.1-10 new pro"Jince was to be named Nueva Verg~r<l, and that some of the towns o~ the province of Cara~a which wero far from the capital o? this province ~ere to be incorporated with the pro vine e to be f 01·med. -419"At the beginning of 1849, Oyanguren was already in possession of the whole coast of the region; he hRd establiGhed the town of Nuev.::i Vergnra ( now Davao) und :bad begun to start o. campaign in the interior. In view of these successes the region was, by decree of January 29, ll-149, created into a province under the name of Nueva Guipuzcoa, in honor of Oyanguren 1 s native province. In April of the same year, the El.cano, under the command of D. MEmuel Quesada, arrived at Davao with o. force of infantry. With the cooperEttion of this force;, Oyanguren ntt8cked and cnptured tho strongly dE)fended fort and Mohnmmedan town of Hilo, which obstructed communication with Linao, a town of the province of Caraga. With this achievement, access to the latter place was made possible, and open and free communication through the vallev of the Agusan was established for a distance of 50 1 eegues. ii -~ (ii) Governor Clc1.veria's Campaign Against Piracy. 1 Early in the year 1348 Governor Claveria completed his preparations for the campaign against piracy, which he had long planned but which important affo.irs of state had prevented him from carrying out in earl i8r years. A fleet was prepared for this purpo_s e under the command of D. Jose Huiz de Apodaca, consisting of the men of war Elcano, Magallanes, and Reina de Castilla, tht; brigs, Constante, Guadiana and Senejayen as transports and a division o:f swift galleys. Three companies of soldiers left for Dapitan on the transports January 27, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Andres Arrieta. In February of the same year, the Elcano and the Magnllanes set sail, carrying on bonrd a small detachment of halberdiers, a section of artilJery with two hotitzers, a force of engineers and two companies of soldiers. On the Reina de Castilla, which flew the flag of the commander Apodaca, embarked the command er-in-chief Claveria with his staff. 1 - Mont ere y Vidal, QQ• Q.i t. -420- On the 10th the expedition reached Dapitan and on the 11th, Governor Cayetano Figueroa of Zamboanga joined it with 150 intrepid volunteers from Zamboanga. The whole force proceeded to the Island of Balanguingui arriving there on the 14th, At dawn of the 16th, takinf advantage of the low-tide, the landing was effected in perfect order. . At eight in the morning the attacking column was formed with three companies of infantry and the 100 -i,-olunteers from Zamboanga, ,;-vith another company as reserves. Claveria, having aroused the cmthuoiasm of the troops with an energetic address, gave the order to attack. After a supreme effort, our forces succeeded in pe~ netrating and capturing the fort. The fleet then proceeded to the southern part, of t-he Islands to attack the cotta or fort of Sipac. After heroic resistance on the part of the Moros, this fort fell into the hands of our troops. The next objective of the expedition was the cotta of Sungap which also fell. On the 25th the strong fott of Bucotingol was attacked and captured. The vintas and boa_ts reconnoitered all the creeks and destroyed the villages of Buasan, Lintan, Pahat and Pandan-pandanan. All the forts c~ptured were destroyed. News of the victory was received in .Manila with joy, and Claveria, the leader of the. expedit~ionary force, was royally welcomed on his return, For his victory, he received th0 titles of Count of Manila and Viscount, and the grand Cross of San Fernando. The Ayuntamiento of I"'Ianile go.vc him a costly sword, while the Economic .Society of Friends of the Country, presented him with a gold medal. (iii) Urbiztondo's Campaign Against Piracy. 1 A piratical raid from Tonquil fell, in 1850, upon the island of Samar and later on the island of Camiguin. The raiders committed the usual atrocitios, besides carrying away 75 unfortunate individuals of both sexes, whom they threw overboard on their r8turn voyage. -421- The Captain-General of the Philippines demanded of the Sultan of Jolo the punishment of the pirates. But the Sultan confessed his impotence to suppress piracy. Governor Urbiztondo himself undertook the task of punishing the wrongdoers, On December 11, 1850, the war vessels Reina de Castilla, Sebastian Elcano, the corvette Villa de Bilbao, and the brig Ligoro left Manila carrying on board Governor Urbiztondo and his Staff, the Commanding General of the navy, D, Manuel de Quesada, 500 infantrymen and 100 artillerymen. At Zamboanga the expeditionary force was enlarged with the addition of two companies of infantry and 102 volunte~ts. The fleet proceeded to Jolo, arriving there on the 29th of December. The city was defended by five cottas or forts. The town contained 7,000 people of whom 500 were.Chinese, The captain of Engineers D. Emilio Bernaldez and the Ensign D. Manuel Sierra, accompanied by the interpreter D. Alejo Alvarez, landed on the 30th and announced to the Sultan that the Chief ExecutivE: of the Islands had arrived and desired to hold a conference with him. But the Sultan refused to meet the Marquis of Solana. Urbiztondo, then, resolved to leave Jolo and wait for reinforcements at Zamboanga preparatory to an intensive campaign against _Jolo. Early in the morning of January 1st, 1851, while the vessels were peacefully lying at anchor, the cottas fired upon them, killing seven men and wounding four. Scton after, the Sultan raised a red flag ind:icating thereby· -the outbreak of war. The next day, the fleet left Jolo for Zamboanga. On the way 600 men landed at Tonquil and burned 96 houses and 106 Moro war vessels. At Zamboanga, reinforcements were awaited and preparations made for a big campaign. On the 19th of February, 1851, the fleet returned to Jolo,_arriving there on the 27th. The next day a landing was effected under shelter of the guns of the fleet. The attacking force closed in on the Moro strongholds and captured them one after the other, By March 1, 1851, the town of Jolo was in the hands of the expeditionary force and the Sultan -422- /imself was a fugitive. / · ,., News of the fall of Jolo struck terror in the whole r,ioro country. Th0 more powerful sultans and dotos of the Sulu Archipelago and_ of the island of Mindanao hastened to solicit from the conqueror treaties of peace and amity. Taking ·auvantc.1ge of these overturel?, Urbiztondo commissioned Major Caballes to explore the southern coast of rdndanao and to inform the chiefs of Cottabato and of the neighboring islands of the result of his campaign • . . - On tho 14th of April, LS51, the governor of Znmboi:lnga, who had been authorized to negotiate a treaty of peace with th0 Sultan and datos of; Julo, left on the Elcano for Jolo, accompanied by Sheriff Mahomad lViinsarin of the town of Pagsahanjan, Basilan, who acted as interpreter. On the 19th, after several conferences, the Sultan and dates of Jolo agreed to sign a treaty of.peace. ~ The Treaty provided: Jolo with all its dependencies was incorporated with the Spanish Crown; Queen Isabel II and her successors were acknowledged as its own sovereigns and protectors; the Sultan and the dates were to preserve intact this territory as an integral part of the Archipelago belonging to the Spanish Government, anc} to refrain from negotiating treaties, commercial conventions, or alliance of any kind with European powers, companies or persons, corporations, sul tcms and chiefs of Malay States; they reiterated the pledge not to engage, or to permit anybody to engage, in piracy and to punish those that would follow such nefarious traffic; they promised to consider as their enemies, the enemies of Spain, and as allies the friends of Spain; Jolo should fly the Spanish flag in all its towns and vessels and that the Sultan and other authorities should use the wGr flag of Spain on land and on the sea, to the exclusion of all others; all traffic carried on by vessels flying the Spanish flag should be free in all the ports of the Sultanate; the Jolcans were forbidden to build fortifications of any ~ind without express permission of the Governor-General of the Philippines, as well as to buy or use firearms without license from the same authority; the Sultan and datos should be conferred with royal titles corresponding to their position and authority; the Govern- -423ment guaranteed to the Sultan and the inhabitants of Jolo free exercise of religion and due respect of their customs; likewise it guaranteed to the bultan and his successors and to all privileged classes the right of succession in accordance with the established order; the vessels and merchandise of Jolo were to onjoy in Spanish ports the same privileges enjoyed by the natives of the Philippines, while the Sultan and the datos were to onjoy their former rights over foreign vessels; the Government reserved the right to establish in Jolo a factory wjth Spanish garrispn, for the establisbment and maintenance of which the Sultan and datos, as well as the natives, should render all necessary aids, offering their services and materials at current prices; for this factory the site of the cotta Daniel was to be assigned; the Sultan of Jolo could issue passports to his subjeGts, after the payment of the necessary fees, and to affix his seal to the passports of Spaniards who might visit his residence; lastly, as compensation to the damages which the war had occasioned, an annual salary of 1,500 pesos was granted to the Sultan, 600 pesos to each of the dates Mahamact- Buloc, Molok and DcJ.niel Amil-Bahal, and 360 pesos to >)heriff Binsarin "for the good services he has rendered to the Spanish Government. -The 1851. 2 treaty was ratified in Manila, April 30, 2 - Not long after the occupation of Jolo in 1851, the Spanish garrison was driven away. Jolo was reoccupied in February, 1876, during the administration of Malcampo. -424- CHAPTER THREE PROVINCIAL AND r,mNICIPAL REFORMS 1. Defects of the Administrative System Another phase of national life which fGlt the impact of the new conditions which 3rose following the opening of the Philippines to foreign trade v-ws the administrative system in the provinces and municipalities of the Philippines. The new class of well-to-do Filipinos felt the need of removing those conditions and practices in th8 government of the provinces and municipalities which obstructed the healthy growth of commerce, agriculture, and industry in the Philippines. It was in answer to this need that important reforms were promulgated in 1844 nnd 1847, The defects of the governmental system which theAe reform measures sought to remedy wore pointed out in two accounts: one by an Englishmo.n who visited the Philippines during the years 1819-H122; the other by Sinibaldo de Mas, who -wrote a report on the Philip"'.)ines under tLe title, Informs sobro el ostado de las Islas Fili121_nss sn 1842. The Englishlnan' s observntions are take:n from his work, R8marks on the Phil1Qpine Islands .1 The government of the Philippine Islands is composed of a governor, who has the title of Captain General, with very extensive powers; a Tenient e Rey, or Lieutenant Governor; the Audiencia or Supreme Court, who are also the Council. this tribunal is composed of three judges, the chief of whom has the title of Regent, and two Fiscals or Attorney Gene- 1 - In B.&:, R., vol. 51. Professor Otley H. Beyer, of the Department of Anthropology University of the Philip· pines, is authority for the information that the 3uthor of the Remarks was Henry Piddington, a Britisher and an owner of a pl0ntation in Calcutta, India, and that the work was pub lished by the Baptist i,1ission Press, Calcutta in 1828. Professor Beyer found tho,se data written on a page of a co~Y of the Remarks which he saw in the library of Harvard Un1ver· sity. -425rals, the one on the part of the king, the other on that of the natives, and this last has the specious title of "Defensor de los Indies." The financial affairs are under the direction of an Intendant, who may be called a financial governor. He has the entire control and administration of all matters relative to the revenue, the civil and military auditors and accounts being under him. Commercial affairs are decided by the Consulade-, or chamber of commerce, composed of all the principal, and, in Manila, some of the infarior merchants. From this is an appeal to a tribunal "de .Alzada" (i.e., of appeal) composed of one judge and two merchants, and from this to the 1-iUdiencia, without whose approbation no sentence is valid. Yhe civic administration is confided to the .nyuntamiento ( Courts of h.lderman or Municipality). This body, composed of the two Alcaldes, twelve Regidors (or Aldermen) and a Syndic, enjoy very extensive privileges, approaching those of Houses of Assembly; their powers, however, appear more confined to remonstrances and protests,- representations against what they conceive arbitrary or erroneous in government, or recommendations of measures suggested either by themselves or others. They have, in general, well answered the object of their institution as a barrier against the encroachments of government, and as a permanent body for reference in cases where local knowledge was necessary, which last deficiency they well supply. The civic power and police are lodged in the hands of a Corregidor and two hlcaldes: the decision of these is final in cases of civil suits, where the value in question is small, 100 dollars being about the maximum. Their criminal jurisdiction extends only to slight fines and corporal punishments, and imprisonment preparatory to trial. The police is confined to the care of the Corregidor, who has extensive powers, and also the inspection and control of the prisons. . To him are also subject the Indian Captains and Officers of tovms, who are annually elected by the natives. These settle small differences, answer for disturbances in their villages, execute police orders, -426impose small contributions of money or labour for local objects, such as repairs of roads, ~c. kc. They also have the power of inflicting slight punishments on the refractory. To them is also confined the collection of the capitation or poll-tax, which is done by dividing the population of the town or village into tens, BO.eh of ·,vhich has 3 Cabeza (or headJ, who is exempt. from tribute himself, but answerable forth~ amount of the ten under him. This tax is th8n paid to the Alcalde or Corregidor, and from him to ~he treasury. The Mestizos and Chinese have also their captains and heads, who nre equally .answerable for the poll-tax. The difflCJrent districts and islands, which are, called provinces, and are 29 in numb er, are governed by Alcaldes. The more troubl0sorne ones, or those requiring a military form of government by military officers, who are also Corregidors. SarIDoangan on the southwest coast of Niindana o, and Marianas, have governors nam1::d from Manila, r. md these are continued from three to five years in office. Th<3 Alc-,1ldeships arc a fertile source of 2,buses and oppression; their pay is mean to the last degree, not excee'ding 350 dollars per annum, and a trifling percentage on the poll-tax. Ttey are in general held by Spaniards of the lower classes, who, finding no possible resource in I<anila, solicit an Alcaldeship. This is easily obtainod, on giving the securities requir0d by government for admission to those offices, which consist in two sureties2 to an amount proportionable to the value of the taxes of the prov~ inc e, which all pass through the ;-\..1 cald e I s hands. · Of the nature and amount of these abuses an idea will be better formed £roffi the following abridged qu.ot,attons, which are translated from the work of 2 - It will bE understood that these sureties have their sh:1re in thu advantages, thnt is plunder, which the iilcalde derives from the gov0rnn1Gnt. Tld.s often amounts t 20, 30, or oven 50,000 dollars in three or four· years~-tho at the time of their leaving Manila, they are in debt~to a large amount. It is but just to obs,3rve, that there are some few honorablG exceptions. B.~ R. -427Comyn:3 "It is indeed common enough to see the barber or lacauey of a governor, or a common sailor, transformed at once into the Alcalde in chief of a popu~ lous province, without any other guide or council than his own boisterous passions. "iv"ithout examining the,inconvenience which may arise from their ignorance, it is yet more lamentable to observe the consequences of their rapacious avarice, which government tacitly allows them to indulge, under the specious title of permissions to trade (indultos). . " ••• and these are such that it may be assorted, that the evil which the Indian feels most severely is derived from the very source which was originally intended for his assistance and protection, that is, from the Alcaldes of the provinces, who, generally speaking, are the determined enemies and the real oppressors of their industry. "It is a well known-fact, that far from promoting the felicity of the provinces to which he is appointed, the Alcalde is exclusively occupied with advancing his private fortune, without being very scrupulous as to the means he employs to do so; hardly is he in office than he declares himself the principal consumer, buyer, and exporter of every production of the province. In all his enterprises he requires the forced assistance of his subjects, and if he condescends to pay them, it is at least only at the price paid for the royal works. These miserable beings carry their produce and manufactures to him, who directly or indirectly has fixed an arbitrary price for them. To offer that price is to prohibit any other from being offered -- to insinuate is to command -the Indians dare not hesitate -- he must please the Alcalde, or submit to his persecution: and thus, free from all rivalry in his trade, being the only Spaniard in the province the Alcalde gives the lnw with~ out fear or even risk, that denunciation of his tyranny should reach the seat of government. lfil..Q, 3 - Comyn, Tomas de, Estado de las Islas Filipinas en (Madrid ) • -428- "T6 enable us to form a more correct idea of these iniquitous proceedings, let us lift a little of the veil with which they are covered, and examine a little their method of collecting the 'tribute' (poll-tax). "The government, desirous of conciliating the interests of the natives with that of the revenue, hc1s in many instances commuted the paynwnt of tliC? poll-tax into a contribution in produce or manufactures;~ year of scarcity arrives, and this contribution, being then of much higher value than the amount of the tax, and consequently the payment in produce a loss, and even occasioning a serious want in their families, they implore the Alcalde to make a representation to governrn8nt that they may be allowed to pay the tribute for that year in money. This is exactly one of those opportunities, when, founding his profits on the misery of his people, the klcalde can in the most unjust manner abuse the power confided to him. He pays no attention to their representations. He is the zealous coll0ctor of the royal revenues; he issues proclamations and odicts, and these are followed by his armed ,satellites, who seize on th8 harvest, e):acting inexorably the tribute, until nothing more is to be obtained. Havinfc!: thus made himselr'-master of the misd1_3rable subsist:ence of his subjects, he changes his tone on a sudden - he is the humble suppliant to government in behalf of the unfortunate Indians, whose wants he describes in the most pathetic terms, urging the inpossibili-t:;y of their paying the tribute in prod uc G - - no d i:f'ie1.1_l ty is experienced in procuring permission for it to be paid in money -- to save appearance, a small portion of it is collected in cash, and the vvhole amount pa.id by him into the treasury, while he resells at an enormous profit, the whole of the produce (generally rice) which ha.s been before collected.T" Sinibaldo de Mas in the following passages of his Informe makes some interesting observations on the conditions existing in the provinces and municipalities of the Philippines prior to the promulgation of the reform decre.es of 1844 and 1s47.l 1 - B,, &:. R., vol. 36, pp·. 279-289. -429Justice is administered by means of an Audiencia, which has the title of royal, and resides in Manila, being composed of cne regent, and five judges; by means of alcaldes-mayor who govern the provinces; and by the governadorcillo whom each village has and who is equivalent to our alcalde de monterilla. The latter-proceeds in criminal cases to the value of two tailes of gold or 44 pesos fuortes. The Royal Audiencia is a court without appeill in Filipinas. The alcaldes-mayor cannot terminate by their own action, civil questions that havo to do with a sum of greater volue than 100 pesos fucrtes, ~r impose any corporal punisl~ent without the approval of the ll.udiencia, and then only imprisonr11ent for 0ne weE:,k. But they are judges of the first instance for every kind of litigious or criminal cases. In order that one may obtain the post of alcalde-mayor, it is not necessary that ho should h1ve studied law. Hence, the grGater part of the heads of the provinces are laymen in that respect. Generally those posts are given to milit~ry men. Consequently, this is the origin that for every process which is prosecuted in a lawsuit or C3use, the alcald e has to have recourse to an assessor, in .order to obtain tho opinion of that onG on which to base his action. But since the ~dvocates reside in Manila, the records have to make at times many trips from the provinco to the capit~l. FroQ this results the inconvenience of delay, the liability of theft or the destruction of tho mail. For, in the mnny rivers that must be crossed, the papers become so wet that they are useless (as happened vdth several letters of a post which w~s received in the chief city of a prov. ' I was there, the envelope o.f W1i1cn 1-. ince wnen 1't was impossible for us to read), and tho malicious extrnction in order to obscure the course of justice, The defect of this system can only be understood if one reflects thnt the various provinces of the colony t\re not situated on a continent, but in various islands, and that by reason of t be periodic winds anJ the hurricanes which prevail in this region, the capital very oYten finds itself' without news of some provinces for two or three months, and of that of Marianas for whole years. 1 -430It appears that what we have said ought to be sufficient to show the necessity of radical reforms in this department, but unfortunately, there are other more grave reasons, for such reform. The alcaldes-mayor are permitted to en~age in business.2 The author of Los Esprits de Lois3 said rr.any years ao.:o that the worst of governme::nts is the coillinP-rcial government; and surely~ :or those who have studied the science of government, all comment on this point is superflous. The alcalde who is permitted to engage in business naturally tries, if possible, to mono::;)0lize i~ by all means in his power. This vice of the system leads some greedy men to the greatest excesses1 which, later, are attributed to all alcaldes in general. Upon my arrival at hanila, I asked a very respectable Spa.nia:cd who had been in tne country for many years about what hc1ppe;.1s in the provinc os. He replied to me: "You know that the alcaldEships are reported to be woi,...th 40.,000 or 50$000 d·;-1ros, and he who seGks one of these posts very earnestly has no other object or hope than to acquire a ce.pital in the six years for the governr!ent cor.fers th'.3Ill. Before going to his province, he borrows a,oco or 10,000 duros from one of t:,he cha.ritable funds at such. and such a per cent. Eesid 1cs, he has to pay an inter-est to those who act as bondsmen for him, both to the governmer~t for the royal trea9ury, and to th8 charitable funds which supply him with money. When hearrives at his -orovince he acts according to conditions ruling ~n that province, for net all provin'::GS are alike in tb3ir productions, and circums'e,2nc es. He generaLt.y establishes a supply store, and, cor.s equently from that rnoment, · any ether stor(;ke2per is his rival and en.em~. I~ such storekee~er has a cr0ditor whom he trie; to :mrry up and g o~s to the a lcc:ild ,9, he gets no protdction. If &ny tLeft. happ JHS to bim thG same thing more or less occurs; for 1 a.::..tto ".:.he alc2lde ord.3rs efforts :mad a to ascertain the thief, far 2 - A:s appears from a note by M:as, thG alcaldes paid o. cert.ain sum for the -:::>rivilege of trading. Their s2laries in 1840 -;;ere variouslv for thn~sums of 300; 600, and 1,000 (one instance) pesos. §. & RP 3 - This is the famous philosophical treatise on political science, _which was publ isheci by CharJ. 0s de Second, baron de la Brode de Iv::ontesquieu, in 171:,.8, and was the p:soduct of twenty ye~rvs work. B. L R. · -431from taking these measures earnestly, he is secretly glad of the losses of his rivals, and it has even been asserted that there are cases in which the alcnlde himself has been the instigator'of the crime. Who is your enemy? That of your trade. But does the alcalde himself sell the goods? Sometimes he sells and measures them, at other times he keeps an agent in the store;- the most usual thing is, if he is married, for his wife to tate charge of the expense, especially of those goods of any value. But his greatest gain consists in making advances of ~oney at the time of the sowing, the period when the Indians need it and try to get-it at.any cost, for their negligence and their vices do not allow them to foresee such a case and be prepared for it. For example: a farmer signs a paper for the alcalde which obliges him to deliver at harvest time ten measures of sugar, which are worth at least two and one-half duros, and he himself receives only one and one-half, consequently, by that operation a1one of advancing money, the alcalde-mayor sometimes gain~ 40 por cent. But what generally happens is that the lnd ian is so short sighted and is so indif' f erent to the future that he signs any burdGns0me obligation provided he gets some moneyl and ha only takes account of what they give him without thinking of what they are going to get from him. For exo.mpJ.e, the alcalde gives him 60 duros as an advance for forty measures of sugar at the hA.rvest time. The ha rv,Jst is bad and he can only give 20. In such case the rec::oning is after the following fashion: ''~'he sugar has been sold for 4 duros, and hGnce 20 measures will omount to 80 duros. You cannot pay them to me, consequently tl1ey can just as well rer._a in as an advance for the coming year at one and one-half. t In c:onseguonce of that the farmer signs a paper by which he ent,ers under obligation to deliver 53 measures at the next harvest.. Harvesttime comes, and if it is bad, he only presents, say, 13. Therefore, 40 measures at 4 duros amount to 160 duros pf debt, and at one and one-half make 108 measur.os for the following year. In this way, the man keeps on adding more and more until all his goods are at the disposal of the alcalde. Besides, there are innumerable other vexations to which he must subject hirns0J f. For instance: he has to deliver to the alcalde 100 cabans of rice; when he presents them the alcalde measures them out with a larger measure than that used in the mo.rket. -432Hence, in reality, the alcalde exacts from him more thnn he is bound to pay. The same thing ha pp ons with indigoo For, a discussion arises, as to whether the indigo is, or is not, very damp, and some libras must be taken off for waste; or, whether it is poorer quality then t1;e Indian proriised, and so on." fTBut surely it must needs b·:: thet :Lt is fitting to take money advanced, since thers i.J ono wLo 3ecks it, and it is worth more for a ?c::.rm:ar to cultivate his 1 and in this way t:ien t::.iat he lea-,res i·'.-; without cultivation for lack of the necessary capital. In regard to the tyranries whic~ th9 21~ald8 tries to commit, it seems to me t.hE,t trwy mi{(Lt be avoided by th·3 countryman bor:towing the money from a. private person v1bo is not in the position to aD~oy him." That is all very well thought out, but I will tell you whnt happens •. T:i1e Indian borro·,,vs money very easily, bnt it is very difficuJ.t to get ~im to pay it, and he generalJy avoids doing so, if possible. If a priv&te person 18:nds him money a:nd does not collec-s it when due, he has to go to t:be a::!..ce.lde in ore.er that the latter may force payment. TiE! latter eitL~,,r does so coldly, or pays no attention to tte ~hole matte~, since his intention is ttat such privat3 persur:s tal--:e TtJarning and never agair: spP,culate i:n this ldLd of' business, the alcctlde will soo~ ~e shut out, or at least will have to c-ubmit himself to th3 fen3rc::l ru::..es. Consaquently, thG result is tl"Ja·;_-; capitalist;::; craH baclc from him, sa:ring, and v2ry :rightly, tLa.4; j_t is only fitting for ~he alcald9s wto possess th3 Leans to cause therr.selves to be priC: when a debt is d,_rn. The aJ.. calde, thsn, remains Ini:::le.te::.- cf tr_ic fie1o., a::1d monopolizes this departmsnt at his pleasu.r3, for he who n?eC:s ;und s has to gc _-:::,o l,irn, for tLey a:;:'e ver;,r few W;iC enJ oy enough crcdi-4_-; to g tJ~ the~:1 e:l.s ,3v1r.er3. Many otber adv2ntc.ges aJ..so favor t.Le aJ_cald3. The parish priests aid h:.m, end many tir,1es +;uLe -::ncrge of the division Of the money of the alca~_cl.G in their Villages, for tnoy knGw. that is tlle sure ITe:n:s r;_': 1:eeping on goods ~erms_with him, and abtRinin; the meas~res which depend on his will in the m'.lt"'::.ct',3 of tncdr villages. The governadorcillos an~ officia~s of j~stice ar~ other instruments of 1,,1fr1~_ch the e.Icalde !nakes use to apportion and collect his funds. 11 Vfoy. is it that - no·.-;' occu:oy themselvos rather in their affairs t ,nese ao than in .those of the alcLcld,2?" ::The a1calde can always, whenever he wishes, make trouble for the gover- -433nadorcillo by making him go to the chief village ivith innumerable pretexts, and by various other m,a thods which it would take a long time to· enumerate, and which it is very easy to ~oncoive. Be~ sides, it is important for the alcalde to keep the governadorcillo sntisfied. Suppose now, that a road has to be built, or a bamboo brid8, or any other work · for which the people of the village who havG to do it, according to their obligation callad polos and services, are summoned, As some of them are busy in their fields or other businass, they wish to be free .from such a burden, and the:i givG the governadorcillo two or three rsa]_s and he excuses them on the ground of sickness. A party of troops o~ a Spaniard passes by and asks for some beast of burden, or an aid in food. That is also an occasion for the gobernadorc.illo to get even with ttose whom he dislikes and obtain part of his demands; for some give him presents in order that he may not gi7e the beasts of burden, while others do not receive the p~y for that food. During the days of tiangui or village fairs, such and such a sum is exacted fo:r· each pos~ in the market place. In genera! the~e are some men of service called bantayar.es who are- a kind of s entir:.el placed at the entrances of vilJ.iges. Many of ttem aJ_ so pay to be excused from that burden whcm th?ir t'1rn comes or when they 2re told that it comes. I~ general he has ten or twelve men called honos, manbc1ra.s, etc., given to him, who are exemp~ from polos and services, and they serve the E.yuntEmLmto to send pape:::'s, conduct prisoners, etc., and the governadorcillo gives therr pe~rrission so that ttsy may cultivate ~lIDir lanes, by coJ.lecting frorri them a cor:.tribution. 11 nBut it seems to me that the Goo ernadorcillo will have to give account, if not for all, at loast :or m::iuy of the ta::;~es t:12t you have ment ionerl.. 11 It oue;:It to be so, and in fact, some enter into the ~1.::;rrn:u~1a1 t rcesury, but the;v are the f ow est and t hcse connr:;r!t ed with the legal mA.tters, for of the others ·::,here is nothing to be said. Fo:>::' example: I have seen an order enclosing a fine as a punisl"irnent .on the go0ern2dc:)::.~cillo ~or sor;1e fault oi~ rdsdeed th&t h8 bad corw1j_:.:,ted. Ee asseri1bl es the cabezas de tararn!a v; the w l1oJ_ e sum is apportioned among the people of ihe villago. The a3ount of t~e fine is collected and the gobernadorci1lo hss still somethinr: left for his maintenance and revelling." "Why do they not comp1ain to the al~alde?" "Because, sir, of just what I told you. The alcalde -434needs the governadqrcillo so that he may use him in his business, and for all such things he is a very farsighted man. Besides, the alcalde who tries to investiisate those snares of the tribunals (ayuntamientos} will Jose rds sense,ci without derivin.:~ any benefit from it. He does not know the J.anguage. As interpreter he has the clerk, who is an Indian, and the entangler-in-chief, and almost always in accord with 11 If t£w clerk is a bad man, will the Indian magnDtes. 11 he not be hated?" I do not say thqt he is beloved, but some fear him, ~nd others are his accomplices. Since the alcalde is, in r0ality, a business mnn, he naturally takes rr.oro intrffest in hj_s business thsn in that of other people, and leaves all. court n:attnrs in charge of the clerk, who comes to bG the arbitr.:n> in that matter, and here is where the latter reaps his harvest. One of the members of the tribunal (ayuntamiento) steals, or causes to be stol8n from some man his buffalo. The man finds out where it is; ho complains; to the gobernadorcillo, they begin to take measures; at last the animul is returned to him, but if it is worth five duros, they m2kc him pay ten duros in expenses so that th8 man either considerG his beast as lo~t and the thieves keB~ it, or the latter get from twice as much as it is worth. Hence, if I were to tell all -~hat passes .in this wise, ill/ story would be very long. One of th~ things which they nre accustomed to do is to let the prisoners go out of.the prison for scvercil days without th1:.~ govornmGnt knowing it. I have seGn that done this very year of ld41 in the province of - ~ - - - ' in re~ard to soma prisoners whom the alcalde-mayor believed to be in prison; but they w6re working on the esto.te of the cler!c, and one of' these prisoners had committed very serious crimes." "But Why do not the curas remedy all that? I have heard it said that they cJ.re r,:;ally the ones who govern the villages. 11 In reality, vvhE')n tl"w curas take that matter upon tbemselvGr;, thGse abiwes are remedied, at least in great measuroj for they know the language well, and every one in tteir village knows th2 truth, if +:.he curt' wisrws to ascertain it. Triat ts what happened in formor times. And nlso at that time the communal -funds wore depos:i.t(:;d j·n the convent, and (thus) many tricks and tyra~nies were avoided. But for some yoars the governors who have come from Espafia have desirGd that the parish priests should keep to their houses and say mass and prGach and not meddle with the temporal government; without takine heed that in a whole province there is no oth,:::r Spaniard who -435governs than the alcalde-mayor himself, who generally comes from Europe and goes without reflection to take his charge without any knowledge whatever of the country or knowing even a single word of its language. Consequently, many religious, in order to avoid trouble, see and keep still, and allow everything to take what course God wills. This is one of the chief causes of the disorders of the villages, and of the increase of cr5-me. "Now tell me, do the alcaldes make all the wealth that they are accustomed to acquire with the kind of trade · which you have explained to me?fl "They have many means of hunting {buscar) for that is the technical expression us,ed in this country, but these means vary according to circumstances. In some provinces great efforts are made to obtain posts as gobernadorcillos and officials of justice, and that department generally is worth a good sum annually." These are things which the clerk or secretary manages. In the province of ________ while Don _____.....,._ __ was alcalde-mayor, that gentleman was in collusion with the manager of the wine monopoly and they practiced the following. Thfa harvesters came with their wine, but they were told that it was impossible to receive it. The~e was a conflict within themselves, for they r~d to ~eturn to their village. Then they were told that if they wished to deposit the wine they would put it in certain jars which had been provided in the storehouse, by paying such and such a rent until the administration could introduce it. The harvesters, who needed the money, thereupon sold the wine to the agents of the alcalde, at any price at all in order to return to their homes. Finally, as he who had come to be an alcalde, has had no other object than to acquire wealth, every matter which does not contribute to that object, such as the making of a bridge, o~ road, the prosecution of evir doers, or any occupation purely of government or justice, distracts and troubles him. On the contrary every means of attaining his end appears to him fitting and good. This method of thought is a little more or less in the minds of all; and thus you observe that no one says here, not even excluding the religious, who are those who know the country best, 'I have so many thousand pesos to gain the suit.' But to tell the truth, it is not to be wondered at that the alcaldes-mayor work without much scrupple. L1 the space of six years they have to pay -436their passage from and to Espafla; to satisfy the hi.e:h interest on the amount which their aJ.caldeship has often cost tr:.em; c,nd besides they rr.ake their fortunes. Not more or less is done in Tarquia • 11 2. The Reform Decree of 1844 Montero y Vidal, in his Historia, on. cit ~, makes the following obse~vati0ns on the -oaci:_csround and provisions of the decree of 1g44:l Ever since the establishment of Spanish ruJ_e in the Phi~ippines the provin~ial executives, (alcaldes· m&yores 9, had ah1ay:s teen .laymen" As su~h they riepended on the servi~es of assessors in the.transaction of judicial matters. These lay alcaldes would send to J.'.;anila the rsco:cds of ci vi1 ar.cd criminal cases with the result that these oftentimes were J.ost on the way, or, after long delays and ~epeat~d journey from the province to tt3 capital and vice-versa, arrived with the final deci3ion, but a.ft.er t:1e individuals concerned had long pc:;SS8d way. This state of affairs was re~edied by tha royal decree of Seµt emo Gr 23, 1841-r. The impoj_"tant provis ions of this decree are the following: "T'ne a ·l ea.._ict.:. '-as mo.yores ~ ~ .... p'·1· -1..n '"'ne nL. ippJ·.. nes s hll a be filled b:r p9rsc,ns i-'!ho ~12.ve studied J_bW and who have practiced law for e.t least two yecrs. (Art. 8). '"Th . + • h ~ 1 ,oe requ~re '. d O-f' · e same qua 1 1. f 2ca~1on SiBL~ lieutenant governors (tenientes de gobierno.J (Art. 9), "Th9 alc.s.ldes mayore s e en~r&d:1 shell serve tr..ree years, a::-id at t!1e end of -shis :pe:·icd they may be appointed to alca1dias rr.ayores d8 ascenso. Those of the ascenso, may, af~er three ye3ts, ~o assiened to the alcald::.as mavore-:, de t·::cmL10. Those of th9 Alcaldi&s de termino rr1ay, af,,er t:iree years, be appointee. to the minis·c::,ny of the Ultramar or of tile Peninsula, ( Art • 11, 12, 13 • j 1 - Vol. 3, pp. 69-71. -437"The order laid down by laws, 26, tit. VI; 54, tit. XVI, Book II, and 5, tit .. II, Book V of the . ' T n. , a.1.ca1.aes -, , ' Reco121. 1,_~c1.0:'.1 ae ~n_.J_as, WElC h f' or.b.ic,s mayores and ·lieutenant governors to engage in trade and commerce, to own houses, l&nds, cattlefarms, cultivated farr11s, pearl boats or any kind of advantages, is hereby reestablished. Neither are they permitted to touch or to appropriate for themselves the silver which pertains to the communal funds o:: the Indians." (Art. 45). 1 1,.,~ To reenforce the order laid down by the foregoing decree, the real cedula of October 3, 1844, was proreulgated, specifical~y abolishing the privilege which tne p:-:'.'ovincial c:h::LEds used to enjoy e:1g2ging in trade, "in view of the abuses which arose from this privilege, to the detriment of ·the Indians and of the Peninsulars who desired to establish thernsel7es in the provinces~" This decree was exten•::'.ed to politico-military governo·rs by royal order issued June 25, 1847. J. The Provinces about the Middle of the Nineteenth Century At the time the German scholar and scientist, F. Jager was here, the Philippines was divided into provinces (P) and dist!'icts ( D) ~ e~c~ of i:-,hich wasi a~ministere9 by an ~lcalde of the 1st (A J, ;,;;no. ( A2), or 3rd c.J..ass (AJ) ~ de tarnuno, de ascenso, de er:-::.rada); by 2 ooliticaI and military governor ( G), or by a ccmmandant (CJ. This classification, in so far as it concerned tbe urovinces of the class of alcaldias, appears to have been made on the basis of the provisions of the reform of 1844.l -------1 - See Craig, .!Y:~, pp. 53-54. The Former Philippines Through Foreign -438ISLANDS OF of ,. Dls- f, tr.1.9t g Rank G. P .. P. P. Al. A2. Al. p. •• A3 G .. Al~ •• 2Al. C, A2. AJ ~ Al. Al. c. A2. G. A2. P. P. F. ...p , • •, c. , , •, , p. p. , P. P. D. D. D, • , • •' p( - :• bJ.os__ I e m . . . . .. . . . . . . •• • . , . •. ..• .• • . .. . . .. . .. ... .. Bat::mgas . • . . . . ....... . t , . • • . .. .. .-~ t. e . 5r_;:n.to".! ... • • •• ... • :S-,.1:_& can . . . . . . . . . . . .. • Ca 6 2,yan • .. . ... • • • .. . . C-3.JilE.r lnes Norte • • • . . . CaT:te .. . . . . • • ..• . Ilocos Norte ... . . .. . . I"i.OCC'3 Sur . . . . • . . . ... • I:1:i~ a 1.1.ta • . • .. . . . • . . • • • Isabel a • . . .. .. Laguna • .. . .. .. .. ... .. Ler..:cS_r!to ••• . . • • .. . • • Mc.nila . .... . " . . . . ~V10::.~orcg • " . .. , . • .. . . . . • 1 • 0 Q a- 0 3Li-,3.37 • ~ > • •• •• , • •• C •.I 0 0 • C Nuev&· Ecija , 1'J'..18V2 Vizcaya• f M ~ .. • . ... .. ... . •• . . . •. . P2. 1gasinan • .. . . . . . . .. p,-.l~:'o. . . .. . . . .. . ? i"::__nc ioe .. . .... . .. . . S~t: . ... . . .. . Ta.vabas . .. . . . . . . . . .. T:Lagan • . . . . . . . . .. . . . . • . . . • .. . .. . ... . • Zam"t,2les . . . . . . . . . . • • • P3rn;_:,aI;.ga · .; ~ • # • 0 ,. , C - I I fj •• ., t&.11 , . " '• •• ,. " • •• ' (, )·~ r ) ' 0 _J so . , I \... i: 1 .. 6Y' •, j 6. 6i1-0 9-:i.:,., :1 o·, r). .,,_;_o ' 3 ~ 17 ·~? 'j ,· ' I -- , •1_ ______ il E.W, 02h 72,936 • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J 24 25 253,472 <> , ··---· $ ;:? , 961 1 O? ,·+ J 23 :;-'-,/_,. •• UD1.(JD ," 23 12 12 SL,,, 520 , ,, tl a lr8 3c:7 ' ::>-3r· tJ)' 5c:~3 (_) !+I;,, 23 9 • • " l .J.. 1 C I 2h0, 341 23 61,,,~37 16 .' 7 r 26_;' 3°') : , en ;::r)l 31 j,, ' _./ ·12 13:.+; 76? 101::. , I '?,.,l 18 -)r( J 813 2 29,200 9 121,251 ,• 26 .., ~ I I 7,052 <"· ••••• 10 4h;794 > tJ 5 34 280,100 E\1+65 •• a, • ' 330,121 ~- . -p . D, P, Population •• Puc. ll.g U. 8 • P,. D. P.., P. D. P. D. a l\T . • /1~:) I 8. • A~1_i:::,ay ,• .Bat,aan p. Do D, Al. I Q Official Al. Al. A2, A2 (?) LUZON 1$ , • -----· _,...!.-~·- --- r I' I I I r r -439ISLANDS BETjJEEN LUZON AND MINDANAO ·-- Rank of ,, Offi..:. Dis- , , t ric . -f-_, •. cial ----!., •, • F. G. a3. • G. a3. • P. • • c. ,.,• F. •,• G, a3. • P. , G. a2. ,• P. •, G., aJ. • , G. a3. •f P. •, , D. - A2. aJ. : G. a3. .• Population ... . . . ..•• .... .......... ... . •,• . .. .. .. . •: .. . . . ...... •, . . . . . . .... .. .. . ...... . . . . .. ... •• Antigue (Panay) Bohol • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Burins .. .. .. Capiz (Panay) Cebu . . . . . . . . Iloilo (Panay) Leyte ... ... Ma.sbate, Ticao . . . . . Mindoro . . . . . . . . . . ... Negros . Romblon ..,• Samar . . . . . .. . . . . . . I G. •• N a m e I P. P. D. P. I ~ # • • • • • • ~ ~ ~ I •• 88,874 ., 187,327 1,786 208,288 318,715 565,500 170,591 12,457 23,050 14'1-, 923 21,579 146,539 • , I •• Pueblos 13 26 1 26 44 35 28 9 10 31 4 28 MINDANAO , ,•, G. a3. G. a3. G. a3. $ •• f , f D. D. ................ ....... ... •• ........ • ................. Cotabato , Misamis (J) .... Surigao (J} . . . . -. Zamboanga ( J) •• Davao I D, D. D. I I I ! 1,103 63,639 24,10/+ 9,618 •• 1 14 12 2 1,537 DISTANT ISLANDS G:. a3. G. a3. G. , .• I s P. P. P. •• 'Ba tanes • -•••••••.•••••• . . . .. .... .. Calamianes . . . . . . . . . • Marianas . . . ... • ••' . . - I 8,381 17,703 5 5,940 6 ' ____ ____ ... 6 -4404. The Municipal Reform Decree of 1847: (a) The Electoral System Prior to 1847 The method of electing town officials before the promulgation of the reform decree of 1847 was governed by the Ordinances of Good Government. Raon's Ordinnnces, issued in 1768, prescribed the method as follows:l "Elections shall be held at the beginning of each year, in the royal buildings, and nowhere else. If held elsewhere,they shall be considered null and void, according to Arandia' s ordinance No .11; and the alcalde or justice violating this order shall be fined,and the notary making the records shall lose his office. The voters in the elections shall be the twelve senior cabe· za de barangay. If any of these are absent, by reason of sickness or :other cause, the number shall be completed from the other cabezas de barangay,observing strict seniority always.- If there are not enough cabezas de barangay, the number of twelve voters shall be completed from the senior notables of the village.With these the retiring gobernadorcillo ahall vote,and they shall nominate three trustworthy persons for the post of gobernadorcillo ,reporting the number of votes received by each. These nominees must be able to read, write, and speak Spanish~ - The ballot shall be secret, and be attested by the notary. The alcaicte-mayor or the justice shall preside at the election, and the father minister may be present if he pleases, in order to represent what he considers advisable, and for no other end. The results of the election shall be sent, stamped and sealed, to the secretary of the superior government; and the appointment of gob ernndorcillo shall be made from Mar.ila, and tbe proper title despatched, while the ·other officials necessary shall be appointed as heretofore. This a~plies to the provinces of Tondo, Laguna, Cavite, Balay2.n, I'v'Iariveles, Bataan, Pampanga, and Bulacan. In other provinces distant from Manila, elections shall be held in the same manner, and appointments made by the alcaldes- 1 - B.~ R., vol. 50, pp.~254-255. -441mayor or justices, who shall be furnished with blank titles, which they shall fill out. No man shall assume office without the proper credentials. Names of all appointees shall be sent to the superior government and entered in the proper books, as well as the fees of the credentials and stamped paper. The fees of media-anata shall be collected from all gobernadorcillos and other offici3ls, th~ amount of such fees being entered in the royal treasury annually. The royal officials, on their part, shaJl see that all fees are paid, and shall ascertain from the alcaldes and justices the number of gobernadorcillos in the various jurisdictions, so that they may check up the records properly.'' (b) The Decree of 1847. 1 The main features of this decree were the following~ "The election or gobernadorcillo and other ministers of justice of these Islands shall be held every year in the government buildings ( casas-tribunales) of the town, under,the supervision of the Chief of the province, and with the assistance of the respective curates, if they care to attend, so that they may present whatever they think proper for the good of the community, In these towns which have no government buildings, the election shall be held in the school-building, but never in a private house or in the parochial building. Art. 1. "The election shall be made by a board (Junta) which shall be composed of the retiring governadorcillo and twelve residents, to be cbosen by lot, one half from the ex-gobernadorcillos and ex-cabezas de barangay, and the other half from among the actual cabezas de barangay. Art. 3. "To be an elector, one must have a profession or a visible means of livelihood, must be free from judicial restraint or impediment; does not keep gambling houses; has not been sentenced to corporal punishment; not a debtor to the state; and has not taken part in -------1 - Berriz, Diccionario de l_a Adpli,n1,s~r.§£i6n de Fili- !U!la§., 1887, vol. 3. -442clandestine meetings for the purposo of gaining votes, or has solicited them for himself or his friends. Nor can he be an elector if he is a servent of the Alcaldemayor, or of the lieutenant governor, or of the curate priest. Art. 4. "The t"tvelve electors having been chosen, they sha 11 proceed to the election of the gobernadorcillo as follows: the Chief of the province, or his representatives, after stating the purpose of the meeting, shall give to each elector a beillot on w:11.ich he writes the names of the men he proposes for govornadorcillo; having collecteC: alJ_ the ballots, the presiding officer shall count them and, immediately after, announce the result o: the election; the person receiving the highest number of votes shall receive first place on the list, and the man receiving the next highest, the second place. Art. 6. "To be a gobernadorcillo one must be a native or Chinese mestizo, resident of the town where he is elected; at loast 26 years of age; can read and write; µiust have held the position of Teaiente nayor or cabeza de barangay with good record; not a con.tractor for any of the sources of income of tho town; and does not cor;1e within the prohibition established by the fourth article." Aft. 7. · "To be n Teniente Mayor one must have hold, with a good record, a municipal office and must possess in addition to the qualifications mentionod in Art. ? •. The three justices for the planted fields, police and cattle (de se~enteras, de policia, de ganados) must also possess the snme qualifications and must have held the office of gobernedorcillo or tcni.ento n~ayor. For these posts nar:1es sLall b8 proposed by t l1e electoral bonrd by plu:~alit7 voteo . The board mu:,t, sea to it that the persons proposed.shall be nen of good conduct and do not come within any of the prohibition mentioned in Article 7. "For the selection of candidates for the minor positions, tho outgoing governadorcillo and the principales shall meet, before t ha election horein described takes place; and sholl form a list of those proposed for the different posts. The gobernadorcillo _shall submit this J.ist to the presiding officer of the election, who, ·with the advice of the parish priest and of -443the persons proposed for gobernadorcillo, shall take down. the names of those who deserve to be included in the minutes which shall be forwarded to the Superior Government. In case the gobernadorcillo and the principales cannot agree as to the list to be proposed, then the- presiding officer, acting with the persons proposed for the post of gobernadorcillo, shall have authority to prepare it. No person shall be proposed for any of these positions who is not of good conduct, or lvho does not have a visible means of livelihood. Preference must be given to the sons of those principales and well-to-do indiv:i_do.als who have the quulifications to aspire to the position of gobernadorcillo~ Likewise care r:mst be taken to the end thnt, for the posts of Tenicntes primeros and Jueces primeros of the visitas, only those persons be chosen who, besides possessing good conduct, are owners of real property, or of any industry which enables them to live decently, or who have servGd in any of the inforior positions .. " Art. 8. "All tr1c acts of elections of the towns in the provinces of Luzon, inc ludtng Mindoro and Masbate, shall be for:-:rarded without loss of time by the respective pro:~inc ial chiefs to the Governor of the Islands who shall issue the certificates in favor of those whose elections are approved. Art. 13. "In the Visayan provinces the same method of election 2.nd the sane rules governing elections that are established in the nrovinc es of Luzon shall be observed. The Alcalde of the province of Ccbu, where the Intendant Governor of tr.e Visayas resic.es, shall for,;,mrd to tho latter the electoral acts of the towns of his province, with a list of the names proposed for the post of gobornadorcillos and for other posts. The Int2nc.ant Governor shall choose from the lists the men whom· he thinks are best qualified for the different posts. Art. 14. "In the other provinces of the Visayas, the electoral acts need not be forwarded to the Intendant Governor, but shall be submitted to the respective chiefs who shall make tho appointments in favor of those who have been proposed in the first instance. For this nurposo blank certificates duly signed shall be forwar~,ed·· in advonc e to the chiefs of the different provinces. Art. 14, -444"In order that the electori may act with absolute freedom and choose only the best men for the different positions, all clandcstinG meetings shall be prohibited; that promises, gifts, and machinations shall be used; nor shall the towns enter into agreements or conventions with their barrios or visitas. These things have frequontly taken place, making it impossible for the electors to act with freedon and often times resulting in the election of mc:n v1ho were not well qualified to administer the affairs of the towns. The town officials are her,2by enjoined to observe strictly this provision of the law and to act with vigor against all violators of this articlo> p'.lnishing severely all abuses that they observed. a Art. 20. (c) A Municipal Election under the Decree of 1847 Jagor, who visited the Islands about the middle of the ninetec::nth c ent1J.ry, had occasion to observe the actual operation of the law of 1847. His observ2,tions on the Philippines were set dovm in his Trc,vels. The fo:.'..lowing, taken from the Travels, is a descrip-cion of an election held in the town of Laua~1g, Samar.l "The governor, who was expected to conduct the election of the district officials in person, but was prevented by illness, sent a deputy. As the annual elections are conducted in the same manner o,er the whole country, that at which : : : was pres2nt m:iy be taken as typical of the rest • . It took place in the common hall; the governor ( or his d9pc.ty) sit·:::.ing 3.t the table, wi+~h the pastor on r:is rifht h&nd, und t:1e clerk on his 2-eft -- the Jatter also actir~g as JE:::, e:.·preter; while CGbezaa de Barangay, ":, he gob-3rLad ::n~ci l1o 1 and those who had prev~_ously .filled the of:f::_ce; -~ook their place all together or:. benches. Firs,t 'Ji.' c:111, six cabezas and as nmny governadorsillos 2re chosen by lot as electors; the actual governadorsillo is the thirteenth, and the rest quit the city~ Aft21' the reaqing of the statutes by t:1e pr2sident, who exho:;_~ts the elec~ tars to the conscientio 1S perf0rm2nce o:i.~ their duty, the latter advar.ce singly to tle table~ 2:nd write three names on a piece of pap2r. Unless a valid protest be made either by t be parish or by the elec·~ors, the one 1 1 - Craig, 212· ci~., pp. 222, 223. -445who has the most votes is forthwith named governadorcillo for the coming year, subject to the approval of the superior jurisdiction at T11anila; which, however, always consents, for the influence of the priest would provide against a disagreeable election. The el~ction of the oth~r functionaries takes place in the same manner, after the new governadorciJlo has been first s 11mr::onGd into the hall, in order that, if he has &ny important objections to the officers then about to be elec:ted, he may be able to ma:-rn them. The whoJ_e affair was conducted quietly and with dignity. n -446- CHAPTER FOUR EDUCATIONAL REFORMS (1) Educational and Cultural Conditions in the Philippines about the Middl9 of the Nineteenth Century. J. Mallat, a French scholar, diplomat and traveller and for many years a resident of ~r1e Philippines, described, in a book he wrote on the Philippines the condition of education and culture existing in the Phil ip;,ines about the middle of the nineteenth century. 1 The following passages of his book deal w;i.th this matter: At the he&d of the public instruction in the Philippines, one finds the university of Manila, called La Real y .-fontificia Universidad de Santo Tomas (i.e., the royal and pon1~::.fical uni·1ersity of SantoTomas). ::::ts four.dation as a college goes back to the f:.rst year of the s8venteent:1:1 century. Its first benefE,ctors were Archbishop Benavides of Manila, and Bishop S,~ria of Nusve Segovia. Both of them made it a gift o~ their library, and, in addition, the first one gave it 1,000 pesos and the second 1,aoo. In 1619, the house was entrust~ ed to the religious of the Order of St. Dominic. The following year the :ourses of pu-olic ir:struct ion we:Pe opened there. Finally, on Nove:mb er 27, 1623, King Felipe IV took it under his sg>ocial pror tection. In the year 16\5, t~1e same monarct obtained a bull from Pope Inr.ocent X, which ereG9ed the college 0£' Santo Tomas :1)f r:Ianila ::.nto a university. The statu.t,3s govert..n.ng ttat ir.stitution today were not drawn up until a long time after, that is to say, in the ysJr 1781. :rstruction there is entrusted to the doctors, licentiates, ~ 1 - Les. P~iliI?"?ines. H~ stoir~, _g§_Qfra?hie, meurs i agric u 7 t ur9 1-ir::1us".:.r1 e et co:fi}fil~~ c es cq..'. off1es .es pa. .e:no.1. e§. -: ? VO 1 s • Paris · . ' 1 .)r-:46 . -. ' · R• ' d ans 1 I n,.J(; f;3.s:;.§. ·J.n o· • ex, VO 1 • 45, p. 263 ff. -447and masters (maestros). At the p·resent time there are 21, both doctors and licentiates, and no masters. Latin, logic, physic~, metaphysics, ethics, canon law, and theology are taught there. In addition to that, some time afterward there was founded a chair of Roman law and one of Snanish law. The number of students who attend that..; university is now 581, namely, sj_xty-one. coll eg-1.at es, fifteen capistas, who are maintained at the expense of the college, and 505 day students. The costume of the collegiates is a long robe of green silk with black sleeves, a beca, a kind of red scarf folded in two parts 1 and c:L'Ossing over the breast and drawn up behind the shoulders, a black collar witl::. a white border and a cap like that worn by the law advocates of Spain. If the university of Manila is the chief institution of public instruction, it is not_ the most anci.ent. From June 8, 1585, the king had ordered the foundation of a college, in which the sons of ti1e Spanish inhabitants of the archipelago might be reared ~n the love of virtue and letters under the direction of the fathers 6f the Society of Jesus. But it was only in 1601 that that order could be carried out b·y the institution of the col1ege of San Jose. The first coJ.legiates m,mbe.i.~ect 13, but that number was soon raised to 20, all of whom were the sons or the near relatives of the first authorities of the country. Pope Gregory XV granted that college the right of conferring degrees of philosophy a:ricl theology. The funds of ·chat institution are d·,:-awn from several estates, which have been conceded to it at different times. They are sufficient to provide for the maintenance of the vice-rector and of the masters in t!l.e aY1nual pay which is granted to them, as well as to the roc.;tor, and for the maintenance of 22 f1·ee pupils. Some pay students are also ac;l:mitted there at the rate of 50 piastres (i .. e., pesos) per year. Philosophy, rhetoric, and Latin are taught ·there. Upon the suppression of the Society of Jesus, that college was closed until 1777. 'l'he costume of the students is a red gown with black sleeves and a black cap. 1 The follege of San Juan de Letran commenced by being a primary school, founded in 1630 at the expense of a charitable man, whose name, Juan Gero- -44'f3nimo Guerrero, deserves to pass to posterity. He consecrat~d himself to gathering together in that institution young orphan boys, and to teaching them reading, writing, and the Christian doctrine. He was also able, thanks to the abundant alms which the inhabitants of Manila put into his hands, to provide for the maintenance and clothing of all those children. Before dying t.hat kir.dtearted man took the habit of St. Dominic, and entrusted the pious foundation which he had underta~en into the bands of that order. The latter erected it into a college, for which it obtained the protection of the king and some funds for its support. By means of a sum of 600 piastres which the alcalde of Pangasinan is charged to give annually to a Dominican who collects it, that college supports gratuitously 25 orphans boys. It also adr2its an unlimited number of boarders, both Indians and mestizos, who pay_50 piastres per year. It finally receives under the narrle of sacristans, porters, liorarians, etc., several young students who do not pay anything. The total number of those who receive education in that college under different titles is today 239 persons. Their costume is blue with black slee7es. A maltese cross is placed at the right on their beca. The charity school (escuela pia) 2 of Manila was established in 1817 under the direction of a special assembly composed of distinguished inhabitar.ts, in the number of which there was a member of the cha pt er of the cathedral, and one of t, he tribunal of commerce. The inhabitants who had assembled supplied the funds which were to serve for the maintenance of that useful establishment. But these funds having been used in t'rade according to custom they had the same fortune that so many other considerable sums and charitable founde.tions of that capital have had, namely, they were lost because of the revolution of Mexic9. The assembly, being dissolved on account of lack of funds; the city took the charity school under its charge. Reading, writing, Christian doctrine, Spanish grammar, and slate arithmetic, are taught there. The pupils 2 - The present Ateneo de Manila originated from this school. -449- ;. must be Spaniards; the sons of well-to-do parents pay 2 piastres per month; those who are less wellto-do, 1 piastres; and the poor pay nothing. In order to be admitted there a ticket from the president of the dissolved assembly was sufficient. At present the regidor is charged in his turn with the management of the establishment which delivers the ticket. The number of pupils at the present time is 50, of whom 20 receive instruction free, In pursuance of reiterated instances from the tribunal of commerce a marine school was opened in Manila in 1820, by royal authorization. Arithmetic, the elements of geometry, rectilinear ann spherical trigonometry, cosmography, and piloting, besides practical geometry a_pplied to the making of hydrographical maps and ple.ns, with the manner of designing them, were taught there. The whole, conformed to the courBe of study for the navy, was composed, according to the order of the king, by the chief of the royal fleet Don Gabriel Gis car. The expenses of the institution are supplied by the funds called a7eria ~ The tribunal of commerce decides a.s to tKeadmission of pupils. and those who distinguish themselves on· graduating bec:ome captains of trading ships, making the voyage to China and India, and even as far as America and Europe. This proves, that, whatever the Spaniards say of it, the young men of Manila are as susceptible to instruction as those of the . mother country. In f&ct, there is no doubt that if the studies of this school were more solid and less theoretical, most remarkable persons would be seen to graduate from it. 3 Finally, in 1$40, a commercial school has been established, which is held in the rooms of the tribunal (of commarca). Bookkeeping, commercial correspondence, and the living languages are taught there free of charge. By choice quite extraordinary, a marked preference is given to the French language, al though that language is one that is spoken the least in that part of the world; since unfortunately our relations there are very few, as we have no longer any need to go there after sugar. 3 · - The present nautical school has its origin in the nautical school referred to here by Mallat. -450Very well equipped 1:i.braries exist in all the convents, and -those of the university and of the colleges off er resources to the students who receive their education in those establishments. This is all we have to say in regard to the institutions consecrated to the education of the young men. That of the young won:en has not been forgotten. · The seminary of San.ta Potenciana was founded in the year 1589 by Governor Dasma:cifias, by virtue of a royal order, Artis~_e 27 cf t~nat ordinanc:e contains the follo1r:ing: 11 ~Jpon arriving at the Filipinas Islands you shall ascertain how and where, and 1rdth what endowment, a convent for the shelter of girls may be founded, so that both t,hose wto should come from here and those born there may live in it and so that they may live modestly, and after being well instructed, mari go o~t therefrcm to be married and bear children. 1 The worthy governor was so zealous in carrying out the wishes of the king that, in the year 1593, the convent was estoblished in the church of San Andres. A new royal ord :i.nanc e of June 11, 1594, approved the regulations of it, which bore on the conduct to be observed in the parlor, on the duties of the chaplain, who was to be :rJ.ore than forty years old, and wr..o was to be, at the sa:ne time, the_ manager of the house, on the costume of both pupils· and the superior and mistr5ss. It was to be suitable, but modest. The king took chnrge of the fur- _ nishing thereof. The governor was authorized to fix the sum which was to be paid by the woman who desired to enter the convent in order to be cloistered there. That sum was to be very moderate. There exists no longer any copy of the first rule of that house, whose archives perished in the terrible earthquake of 1645, 111hen ":",er. or twelve pupils lost their lives. New rules were drawn up and approved in 1696, and remained ir1 force until 1823, at which time t heywere revised. The school is established at present in a house which was bought for its use by the public treasury, namely, the ancient locality of the arsenal. The treasurer also furnishes the exoenses of a small chapel, those of their medico.I s ~rvice, -451of pharmacy, of the infirmary, of the clothing of the pupils, and of six serving girls, the total sum amounting to 700 piastres per year, besides the support of a sacristan, four fagot gatherers, and one woman to go for provisio~s. The Treasury pays for the support of one superior, of one portress, and twentr-four colJ.egiates' one and a half reals (one fracJ per day for each one. And they are given besides, from the royal magazines, 46 baskets of pinag~~ rice, of 15 gantas per basket, 25 quintals of wood, and 17 gantas of coconut oil for lights .4 After the foundation of the confraternity of the Santa Misericordia, the latter also supported many poor Spanish orphans girls. It caused· thGse girls to be reared either at Santa Potenciana or in private houses~ But in 1632, a house having been bought in order to gather them all there together, the confraternity founded the school of Santa Isabel. The rules drawn up in 1650 were entirely changed in 181.3. The number of pupils in this institution is at present 105, who are admitted under diverse titles and conditions. The boarders pay 60 piastres annually. The others get their education free. Da:r pupils ar.e also admitted there, but they are not allowed to communicate with those who live in the house. The teaching is quite elementary. The service is furnished by twelve servant girls for the interior, and eight men for the outside work.5 In the preceding chapters, the description of the beaterios6 has been seen, of which the majority are dedicated to the education of poor young girls. 4 - In 1861, the College of Sta. Pot enc ia.na was fused with Santa Isabel College. · 5 - In 1S63, the 6ollege of Santa Isabel passed under the charge of the Sisters of Charity. 6 - The institution referred to here are the following: Sta. Rosa, founded in 1750; the beaterio of Santa Catalina de Sena founded in 1696; the beaterio of the Compafiia de Jesus, founded in 1684; the beaterio of San Sebastian de Calumpang, founded in 1719; and the beaterio of Sta. Rita de Pasig in 1740. In all th8S8 inst;itutions the schedule of activities followed was substantially the same. -452One can see, after what we have just said, that education in the Philippines, both of the children of the country and of the mestizos and Indians of both sexes, is not so greatly neglected as certain persons pretend, and that the colony has made on the contrary, from the earliest times the greatest efforts for the instruction of the people. Even in the 3mallest villages the.Indians find facilities for learning to read and write. For everywhere one finds primary schools which are supported by the people. On the other hand, the aptness of the Indians is quite remarkabl€. From the most tender age they can be seen to draw their letters with a sharpened bamboo either on the sand or on the green banana leaves. Also many excellent copyists can be found among them, who are skillful in imitating any kind of writing, designs, or printed characters. Among others, there is mentioned a missal book which was copied by an Indian and sent to one of the Spanish kings. It is asserted that it was impossible to distinguish it from the original. They also copy geographical maps with rare exactness • . It follows, then, that the instruction of the Indians is far from being backward, if one compares it with that of the popular classes in Europe. Nearly all the Tagalogs knew how to read and write. However, in regard to the sciences, properly so called, The program followed in Santa Rosa as noted by Bowring in his Visit to the PhiliRPines, chapter XI, was typical of the rest. Bowring describes it as follows: "The inamates rise at five A.rvr. to chant the trisagio (holy, holy, holy); to hear mass and engage in devotion for the first part of t~e rosary till six; ~hen to wash and dress; breakfast at half-past six; instruction from seven to ten; dinner at half past eleven in the rectory; siesta and rest till half-past two P.M.; devotion in the chapel, going thru thesecond part of the rosary; instruction from half-past three till half-past five; at the "oracion 11 they return to the chapel, recite the third part of the rosary, and engage in reading and meditation for half an houri supper at eight P.M.; enjoy themselves in the cloister or garden till nine; another prayer, and then retire to their cells." -453very little progress has been made in them among the Indians of the Philippines. Some mestizos alone have a slight smattering of them, and those among the Indians who received orders know tat,in. The most erudite are without doubt those who, having studied. at the university of Santo Tomas, have embraced the career of the tar. Among them are counted advocates worthy of being placed by the side of the most celebrated in Spain. In regard to what concerns literature, there is a Tagalog grammar and dictionary, as well as a work called a:rt§, which :..s a kind of polyglot grammar of the Tagc:].og, Bi::::ol,Visayan and Isinayan. All these works, and in gen9ral 8Verything that appears in one of the languages of the country, are published by the care of the religious, who have at their disposition the printing house of Santo Tomas, and who have the means of meeting the expenses of the printing, which the Indian;=; could not do. Both at Manila and in its environs there are several printing houses 1 for the use of the oublic. 'I'hoy are the pres:=::es of Nuestra Sefiora de L~reto at Sampaloc, which issues grammars, dictionaries, w0rks of history, etc. There was formerly published at ri-:aniJ.a a newapaper ce.lled El_Noticioso Filiging_, 'I'oda.y it appears there only as \a paper of; the prices . current j_n Spanish and in English. At our departure the establishment of a new newspaper was beginning.7 The literary works consist of pieces in verse, sometimes on very weighty subjects. Thus, for example, the npassion of our Lord!! bas been tre.nslated into Tagalog . verse. 'I'hen there are tragedies, which as· we have mentioned above are excessively long. They often contain the entire life of a king. There 7 - Retana mentions a paper, 1-n NQY-ic.,ios_g Fil.J:.Pinq_, which conjectures to have been foundc:d in 1838, following Francisco Diaz Puertas, wto mentions it. Retana refers to this passage of Mallat. See his P,~riod.5_smo __FiJ.ir2.ino (Madrid, 18951, for data regarding the various newspapers and periodicals of the Philippines. This also appeared in instalments in Retana' s magazine J.,n fg_lit~_g._g_J~;spana Eill .E!lipinas. B. & R. -454are, furthermore, little poems, corridas, epithaliums, and songs. These last especially are very numerous and have special names, sucL, as _c;omintang de la c_onouist8., t~e sinanpablo, the 1:s.~9.L\S~i.fi.9-., th,3 cavL:,Qg:2 n. f~ot on·1_y are the woros of these songs, but also the melodies, nation.sl, and the Indians note the music cf them with prodigious cleverness. All the Indians, in fact, are naturally given to music and there are some of ttem who play five or six instruments. Also there is not a vill2,ge, however small it be, where mass is not accompanied by music for lack of an organ. The choice of the airs which they plRy is not :::t:;_ways the most Gdifying. We have heard in the churches the walt ~ms of Musard, and the gayest airs of the French comic opera. Thus, as we have just said, the Indians are born musicians. Those who before knew only the Chinese tamtam, the Ja·iranese drum, and a kind of flute of Pan,. made of a bit of baml:)oo, today c11l tivate the European inst:..nurrien";:,s vJi th a love which comes to be a passion. Tney are not, for the most part, very strong in vocal music, for tn'~Y have ve27 little or no voice. Nevertn~less, their singing offers in our opinion .J. certain characte·r of originality ·which is not unworthy of attention. Scarcely had the S:paniards conquered that archipelago than its inhabit2.nts tried to imitate the musical instruments of Europe, and the vj±J?_gl~, a kind of guitar having a very great number of strings, but which is not always the same, soon boceme their favorite ir:st:~,Jment. They manufactured it with a remarkable pe:rfc::ction. And besides, they th9mselves made the strings. The bandolog is another guitar, but smaller, having twenty-four metallic strings joined by fours. They are very skilful in playing thE:.t instrument, and they make use either of one of tbei~ finqer nails' which they a2.lmv to grow to a ve·:·y great length, or of a little bit of wood. W~ du not know from what nation they have borrowed_ ttat instrument, which we have never seen in Spain. The music of the villages 'of which we have spoken is generally composed of vio1ins, of ebony flutes, or even of bamboo in the remote provinces, -455and of a 1'ajo de viguela, a large guitar of the size of the violencello, which is played with a horn or ebony finger expressly made (for that purpose). They draw from it very agreeable sounds. That music, somewhat discordant, is not often wholly without something agreeable in it. We cannot help admiring men who can reach that point without having taken lessons, and of whom the majority have perhaps never had occasion to meet an artist. The military music of the regiments of the garrison at Manila, and in some large villages of the provinces, tas reached a point of perfection which is astonishing. We have never heard better in Spain, not even in Madrid • It is at the square of the pa lace that, on Thursdays, Sundays, and fete days at eight o'clock in the evening, at the time when the retreat is beaten, the society of Manila and the foreigners and travellers, assemble to hear the concert. The Indians play there from memory for two or three hours alternately, from great overtunres of Rossini and Meyerbeer, or contradances, and vaudevilles. They owe the great progress which they have made for some time in t~eir militai"Y music to tte French masters who direct them. These same musicians are also surn..111oned- to the great balls, where they execute pieces among the contradanc es played by other i_nstruments. We have stated that the vocal music of the Indians is not equal to that of their instrumental music, which is especially true of the qua1ity of their voice which is sharp and shrill. All their airs are applied to words of love; they are regrets, and reproaches, addressed toa faithless swain, and sometimes allusions drawn from the history of the ancient kings, or from holy Scripture. Sometimes a number of Indians gc:ther in the house of one of them and form a conc~rt of amateurs. At that time they sing the Passi01:. to the accompaniment of a full orchestra. A~ other times, five, seven, or nine bagontaos (young bachelors) assemble at night in the beautiful clear moonlight and run about the villages in the vicinity of Manila, where they give serenades to their sweethearts, their dal.§_g~, or .££.!!_Zella~ {i.e. do!,!£_~11~ "maidens''), whom the Tagalogs who are of more distinguished rank and who speak Spanish call their novi§§. (i.e~ -456sweethearts.) One could imagine nothing more singular and more picturesque than to see during those brilliant nights of the torrid zone, when the moon sheds floods of silver 1 ight, s nd the :J,J.J.my ·oree ze tempers the burning heat of the atmosphere, to see, we say, the Indians crouched on cuclillas for entire hours without getting tired of tha,:::; posit~_on, which we would find so uncomfortable, singing their love under the windows of their mistress. Numerous orchestras of musicians are s urnmoned at any hour of tte day to the houses of Manila in order to have &11 sorts cf ancj_ent and modern dances there: the old ri,godcns,3 quadrilles, the EngJ.i.sh contradances, waltzesj gallops, and without doubt the polka will not be long in penetrating there also. It is rare among the I!1d:.ans, and especic1lly among the mestizos, that a baptism, marriage, or any ceremony is celebrated withol:..t music and dancing. The burial of children (creituras) is always accompanied by music. One further word on the extraordinary talent of the Indians for nusical execution. One day we accompanied the alcald.e of the pro·rir:ce of Laguna on a tour which he was m&!-cina: .for the el3ction of gobernadorcillos. We reached 1::;a1auan, Wi1ere we stopped to sup and sleep et the house of a respectable cura whose house, lj_ke that of all ecclesiastics, was open to all travelers without exception. Travelers are there fed and lodged so long as they please to stop without any cos~ to them. Now, at the house of this cura we heard an Indian who olayed with eaual Perfection on seven different in~truments, on-which he executed the most difficult pieces. When he had finished, the good cur2, in order to amuse us, performed some sleight of hand tricks and juggling, and showed us-a theater of rnarionnettes, which he himself mounted. The comi~teng wtich we he:, ve be:f:'ore :rnent ioned as a national s0Y-1f.?'; is aJ_0·0 a dance. Wbi:e tne musicians are playing and singin~ it an lnd~an and Indian woman execute a pant;mi;e which agrees with 8 - A dance allied to the quadrillo, but with different and more graceful figures. B. r.,:, R. -457the words, It is a lover who is trying to inflame the heart of a young girl, about whom he runs while making innumerable amourous movements, accompanied by movements of the arms and of the body, which are not the most decent, but which cause the spectators to break out into loud an~ yojoys laugh_er. Finally, the lover, not being able to succeed, \feigns to be sick and falls into a chair prepared for him. The young girl, frightened, flies to his aid but he rises again very soon cured, and begins to dance and turn about with her in all directions, to the great applause of those present.9 The Pamp_~ngo is another dance which is especially rema:r·kable by mo·,ements of the loins, and the special grace which the women show in it. It is accompanied by very significative clapping of the hands. In the Visayas th'3y dance the bagg_y, the music and song of which are langorous and melancholy, like that of the comintang. It is also a lover and a mistress who dance, the while they mingle their motions· with cries. 9 - The words of this song are as follows: I. To know is to remember thee; And yet in grief I rove, B8cause though wilt not fathom me, Nor feel how much I love. II. All traitors are the stars on highFor broken hopes I grieve I cannot live - I fain would die; 'Tis misery to live. III. Sweet birdi yet flutter o'er my way And chant thy victim's doom; Be thine, be thine the funeral lay That consecrates my tomb. -458The lv.iont escos of the provinces of the north of the island of Luzon also dance to the sound of their bamboo flutes, but their gest .1res and their postures are so indecent that for shsr.ie a woman never dances except with, her husband. 1 The Negritos in their dances held in their hands their Sows and arrows and ut"'::.er torrible cries. They make frightful con·'::,ortions and ::Leaps to which in the country one has gi'ren the name of _c.,emarones, comparing them to those that the sea-crabs make in the water. They end their dance by shooting their arrows into the air, and their eyesight is so quick that they so;ne"'::.imes kilJ. a bL"'d on the wing. Their ourouc~.I, or sor..g of th<2 mountains, is a very pleasant melody consisting of six measures which are repeated time and time again, which if it were arranged for chorus, would make a fine effect. The fandango, the capateado, the cachucha, a~ other Spanish c.iances have be8n adopted b~/ the :i:ndians, and th,,:;y do not lack, grace when they- dance them to the a~ccmpaniment of castinets, which they play witr1 a remarkable p:.'ecision. They a:1.so execute some dances of Nuev2 Espafia, such as for example the Ec"abe.§., where they show all the Spanish vivacity with movements of -sheir figure, of their breasts, of their hips, to right and left for'<'llard and backvv2.rd, and pirouttes, whose rapidity is sue h that the eye can sc2rce follow them. Drawing and painting are much :::'urthor advanced than one woul'i believe among the Indi2.ns of the Philippines. Vvithout ta kins ir.t,o acco,.,mt th8 fine geographical maps of Nictolqs de Ocampo, we can cite the miniatures. of De~ian, and Saurinno, the pictures of churches, and the oil portrai~s of Oreco. These works are indeed far from being perfect, for the artists to whom they are due ha vi:a nevr=;r had &ny masters, but they pres2nt m:1rl:s of great talcmt, nnd the portrR.its he.ave a stri~ing r13sembJ:Jrice (to thr;; driginal), We seize this occasio~ to testify all our gratitude to the two mestizo desi~ners, Juan Serapio Transfiguracion N~pomuceno, and his son, for the services which as artists they have been plecised to render us with so much kindness. -459(2) The Educational Decree of 1~63 As Mallat observed in his work on tte Philippines, "primary schools supported by the people" were found everywhere in the Philippines. There were facilities, according to him, for learning to reed 2nd. write "even in the smallest villages." How adeq~ata the facilities for primary education were, Mallat) how·2-;rer} did not state. The fact is the primary sc:iools of his time suff,jred from many handicaps. For one thing, there was a sad lack of trained elementary school teac~oers. For another, the educational facilities were poor and inadequa:;e. In many towns and villages of the Philippines the school buildings wore unsuitable. Teaci1i.ng mat 8ri3.ls, ~oo, such as t extbuoks and readers were meagre if not entirely unavailable. The basic defect of the system of pri~ary education was, from the beginning, the insufficiency of funds for sc'hool purposes. ':'he financiel resources. of towns and villages were too inadequate to meet the basic needs of primary education. In 1839, the Spanish Government made an attempt to improve the situation. Tr...at year it ordered the creation of an educational commission to draft a set of regulations for the schools of the Philippines. The royal order, however, was·not,for some reason or another, put, into effect. It was not until several years later that an educational commission such as contemplated by the royal decree of 1839 was formed~ Governor Crespo, in 1855, created a commission to ~tudy the conditions cind needs of elementary education in the Philippines. The corwnission was instructed to study in particula.r the follcwing aspects of el ernentary educ at ion and to make r2cornmendat ions on them: (1) the nun~ber of men and women teachers needed in each town of the Philippines on the hc:,sis of the number of tribute payers in each town; (2) the regul2tions to be adopted governing teaching in the schools; (3) the subjects to be included in the course of study; (4) the advisability of establishing in Manila a school for the training of teachers. The commission showed very little progress in tho beginning, but in the latter part of 1860 and the early months of 1861 it began to show greater activity, spurred on by the progress of others who, in the me!lntime, had been commissioned to draft measures along similar lines. Gov- -460ernor Solano on August 10, 1860, hnd appointed an official to drGw up a plan of public schools, while Governor Lemery had commissioned the Jesuit, Jose Fern6ndez Cuevas, early in 1861, to undertEtke c1 similar work. On the 7th of March 1861, the former commission C:J.ided by the Jesuit fathers, finally made its report. The report of th s c om11ission was forwarded to 3pain. On tte b2sis of the report's findings and recor,1rr.end at ions, the, Educ::, t ional Dacree of December 20, 1863, was formulDted • ..1.. The educational decree of 1863 consists of three parts: the first deals with the educational systen in its broad feo.tures; the second contai:.1s the reguln.ticms for the normal school; and the t~ird eets fort~ the regulations for the primary schools. (a) Irr.porta.nt Provis ions of the Decree of 1 861 2 ( i) The Public School Systgg "A normal school for te~chers of primary instruction is established in the city of ~anila, in charge of and under the direction of the ~:athers of the Society of Jesus, and tr:e expenses sho.11 be defrayed by the central treasury of ways and means. Art. 1. ''Spanish scholars, natives of the Archipelago or of Europe, shall be admitted into the said school, The pupils shall receive a free etiu~ation, but shall be obliged to exercise the duties of teacher in the native schools of the Archipelago for the space of ten years following their graduation from tte Institution. Art. 2. nrn oach one of the villa~es, there shall be at least one sc:1001 of primary ir.struct ion for males, and another for f.' ema:es. Instr1c t ion herein shall be fre.e to the :ooor, and attendance ,s}1all be compulsory. Arts. 3 and 4. 1 - See Barrantes, 1n?tD-!9..£i6n P.rirnaria;H·A_lzono., _fH_gtory__of Erlucation in t.he_ :?bili2J?ins.3; Ba zaco, istory Q_ 1ducation ir: che_£)iil::12t?ines. 2 - B. & R., vol. 46, p. 79 ff. -461"The schools for males shall be of three classes: ~ntr§da, ascenso and termino of the second class, and termino of the first class. The schools of termj_no oi-the first class, namely those of Manila and its district, shall be supplied with teachers by competitive examination among the teachers, with the certificate from the normal school, with experience as teachers. Art. 5. "The salary of teachers, as well as the foundBtion of the school, acquisition, and conservation of school supplies and equjpment, and the rent of the building shall constitute an obligatory expense on the respective local budget. Art. 7. "The teachers appointed from the normal school can't be discharged except for legitimate cause and by resolution of the superior civil governor, nnd after hearing the interested party. Art. 9. "Teachers and assistants shall be exempt from the giving of personal services so long as they exercise their duties, and after ceasing to exercise them, if they have exercised them for fifteen years. After five years of duty, the teachers shall enjoy distinction as principales. Art. 12. "The teachers of boih sexes and the assistants shall have the right, in case of disability for the discharge of their duties, of pension. Art. 13. "The supe,rior inspection of primary education shall be exercised by the superior civil governor of the islands, with the aid of a commission which shall be established in the capital under the name of "Superior Commission of Primary Instruction.If Said commission sha.11 be composed of the superior governor as president, of the right reverend archbishop of Manila, and of seven mr:3mb ers of recognized ability appointed by the first named. The chiefs of the provinces shall be appointed provincial inspectors, and shall be aided by a commission composed of the chief, of the diocesan prelate, and in the latter's absence, of the parish priest of the chief city, and of the alcalde-rnayor, or administrator of revenues. -462"The parish priests shall be the local inspectors ex-officio and shall direct the teaching of the Christian doctrine and morals under the direction of the right reverend prelates. Art. 15, "After a school has been established in any village for fifteen years, no natives who cannot talk, read and write the Castilian language shall form a part of the principalia unless they ~enjoy that distinction by right of inhe::itance. After the school has been established for thirty years, only those who possess the above-mentioned condition shall enjoy exemption from the personal serTl.ce tax, except in case of sickness. Five years after the publication of this decree, no one who does not possess the abovementione~ qualification, can be appointed to salaried posts in the Philippines Archipelago." Arts. 16 ~ 17, (ii) Re2:ul2tions Governing the Normal School "The object of the Normal School is to serve as a seminary for religious, obedient, and instructed teachers, for the manegement of primary schools throughout the whole Arctipelago. In the same locality of the Normal School, there shall be a school of primary instruction for non-resident boys, whose classes shall be managed, under the supsrvision of a teacher of the normal school, by the pupils of the same." (Arts. 1 and 3 • ) "~ducation in Norn2l School shall comprise the following branches: 1. Religion, morals, and sacred history. 2. Theory and practice of reading. 3. Theory and practice of writing. 4. An extensive know~edge of the Castillian lan~ guage with exercises in analysis, composition, and orthography. 5. Arithmetic, to ratio and proportion, elevetion to powers, and extraction ~f roots, ' inclusive, together with the decimal metric ~ystem with its equivalent of local weights and measures. 6. Principles of Spanish Geography and history, 7. IqQID of Geometry. 8. Common acquaintance with physical and natural sciences. -4639. Ideas of practical Agriculture with refer- ence to the cultivation of the products of the country. 10. Rules of Courtesy. 11. Lessons in vocal and organ music. 12. Elements of pedagogy. \Art. 4). "These studies shall. run for three years, and during the six months of the last term, the scholars shall have practical exercise in teaching, by teaching in the classes of the primary school annexed to the 1~ormal School • ( Art . 6. ) "The scholars of the normal school who shall have completed the courses of their studies and shall have obtained by their good deportment, application and knowledge, the mark of "Excellent" (sobresaliente) in the final examinations for the three consecutive years shall receive a teacher's certificate, in which shall be expressed their creditable mark, and they shall be empowered to teach schools of ascenso. Those who shall not have obtained the mark of Excellent, but that of Good (bue.!!Q.), or fair (regular) in the abovementioned examinations, shall also receive teacher's certificate with their corresponding mark expressed therein, and they shall be able to reach schools of entrada. Finally, those who shall have failed in said examinations, if after they shall have repeated the exercise, shall have merited approval, shall only receive certificates as assistant teachers. (Art. 7.) "The resident scholars of the Normal School shall be divided into regular (de numero) and supernumerary resident pupils. The regular resident scholars shall receive their education free and shall pay n9thing for their support, treatment, school equipment, and aid from the teaching force. They shall be obliged to fulfil their duties for 10 years as teachers of primary schools. Supernumerary resident scholars shall pay the institution 8 pesos per month for their board, and their rank in the school and other things will be eaual to that of the regular scholars. (Arts. 9, 10, 11, 12.) "The normal school shall be directed and governed by the Fathers of the Society of Jesus .• (Art. 15.) -464"The Director of the Normal School shall propose at the approval of the superior civil government, a list of books which can be used as textbooks by the scholars, to which the masters shall subject their explanation. The teachers shall give their lessons in the courses of which it is advisable for this system to make use, under the authority of a director. (Art. 24.) "The superior Civil Governor shall have the right to issue certificates as t8acher and assistant at the proposal of the director of the normal school. Certificates as teachers shall contain the mark which shall have been obtained and the class of schools for which such persons are qualified. (Arts. 27 &28.) (iii) Regulations Prescribed b..L the Decree of 186) for Pri:nary'scfioois. - "The teaching in the schools for natives shall comprise: (1) The Christian doctrine and principles of morality and sacred history. ( 2) Reading. ( 3 ) Writing. ( 4) Practical teaching of the Castilian language. ( 5 ) Principles of arithmetic including the four rules for integers, common frections, c;lecimals, and denominate numbers, with principles of the decimal me-:,ric system, and its equivalents in the usual weights and measures. ( 6) Principles of general geography and Spanish history. ( 7) Principles of practical agriculture, with application to the products of the countrv. ( $) Rules· of courtesy. ( 9} Vocal music. "The primary teaching of girls will include all the above except Nos. 6 and 7, and the needlework suitable to their sex. (Art. l}. ""'.465- "Primary instruction!is obligatory for all the natives between the aHes of 7 and 12. The teacher shall have especial care that the sqholars have practical exercise in speaking the Castilian language. Primary instruction shall be free for ghildren whose parents are not known to be wealthy~ Paper, copybooks, ink, ·and pens, will be free to all the children. (Arts. 2, 3, ~ 4.) "The parish priest shall direct the teaching of Christian doctrine and morality .. (Art. 6.) "The Christian doc"!:.rine shall be taught by the catechism which is in use, and approved by ecclesiastical authorities. For reading, the syllabary prescribed by the superior civil governor, the Cathecism of Astete, and the Cathecism of Fleuri, shall be used. For writing, the l\,uestras d~-c~r!:'.icter Espanol by Iturzaeta shall be used. (Art. 7.J "Teachers of entrada shall receive from 8 to 12 persos per month; those of ascenso, from 12 to 15; those of termino of the second grade from 15 to 20. In addition teachers shall enjoy the following advantages: (1) A dwelling apartment for themselves and family in the schoolhouse, or reimbursement if they rent one. (2) The fees paid by well-to-do children. (3) The privileges and exemptions and pension mentioned in Arts. 12, 13, and 14 of the Royal decree. (Arts. 23 and 24.) "~omen teachers for p:irls must be at least 25 yGars old, and shall possess the other qualifica- tions that are demanded from the male teachers. They shall receive monthly pay of 8 pesos if they have a certificat0, and 6 if the contrary be true, and all the fees of wealthy girls. They shall also have the right to live in the school, and in case they do not live there, to a reimbursement to pay their rent. (Arts. 26, 28). "The Superior Board of Primary Instruction shall consult the superior government of the Islands: -466(1) In regard to the approval of textbooks. (2) On measures in regard to the dismissal of teachers, declarations of the grades of schools, and assignment of pay to the instructors. (3) In everything also concerning the execution of this plan, and especially concerning the doubts arising from the same." Art. 34. The Educational Decree of 1863 is a notable landmark in the educational history of the Philippines. It was the basis of the primary school system ·which existed in the Philippines in the last decades of the' Spanish period. Under the decree, the elementary school system of the country was reorganized. Changes and improvements were introduced to remedy some of the system's basic defects. A normal school was established under the. management and supervision of the Society of Jesus, to meet the need for trained elementary school teachers. Adequate provision was made to facilitate the rapid propagation of the Spanish language. Teachers were exempted from ~he polos y servicios. Teachers, too, were given the opportunity to become members of the principalia, the social elite in the community. After serving for a certain number of years, a teacher could rise to the status and dignity of a principal. The teaching profession was raised to a high level of dignity and respectability. The decree, however, left unresolved the big problem affecting primary education in the Philippines, the problem of adequate financial support. Under the Educational Decree of 1863, the towns and villages of the Philippines continued as before to take care of providing for the support and maintenance of primary education in their respective jurisdictions. With the limited funds at their disposal, many towns and villages in thG Philippines were in no position to maintain adequately equipped and adequately staffed elementary schools. Elementary education in many towns and villages in the Philippines remained, for ttiis reason, in the same state of backwardness in which it was prior to the reform decree of 1$63. (b) The Municipal Girls' School of Manila Another notable event· in Philippine educational history was the establieihment in February, 1864, of the Municipal Girl's School of Manila. This school was created -467by the government of the city of Manila~ In 1868, the school was converted into a normal school for the training of women teachers of elementary eduGation. It was admi0 ome of the regulanistered by the Sisters of Charity, tions prescribed by the Superior Civil Government for this school are as follows:3 "The object of this school is to give the girls of this capital the inestimable benefit of a fine education and the elementary instruction, with all the solidity and amplitude advisable. Instruction shall embrace two kinds of subjects: the required subjects and the optional subjects. "The required subjects are: Christian doctrine, politeness, reading, writing? Castilian grammar, arithmetic, the decimal metric system, and the needlework suitable for their sex, such as sewing, darning and cutting. "The optional subjects are: geography, general history; special history of Espana; elements of natural history; embroidery in white, with silks, corded silk, beads, and gold, and other like needle-work. (Chapter I). "All the children who solicit within the number permitted by the size of the building, shall be admitted without distinction, from the age of five years. "Teaching will be free for all pupils in all necessary and optional subjects named in these regulations. ( Cha pt er II.} ~ "A commission composed of three women appointed by his Excellency, the superior civil governor, on recommendation of the Ayuntamiento, one of whom shall be relieved annually, shall be created for the supervision of the school. The functions of this commission shall be those only of supervision and oversight. In consequence of that they must inform the superior authority of any fault which is noted with the-fitting remarks for its correction.'' 3 - Ibid, p • 119, ff. -46$C. The Ateneo Municipal de Manila Another important educational developme~t at t~is time was that which concerned the Alma l'-1ater of Dr. Jose Rizal. In 1859, the Manila ayuntamiento turned over to the Jesuits the management of the Escuela Municipal de Manila. This school was the successor of the Escuela Pia, a school of primary instruction founded in the early years of the nineteenth century. I,n 1E!65, with the name changed to Ateneo Municipal de Manila; the school was raised to 'the status of a college. The Jesuit Fathers reorganized the institution along the lines laid down in the Ratio Studiorum. Changes were made in the course of study and institutional regulations of the college to bring it in conformity with Jesuit ideas and j.9-eals of education. This was the school where 1$71 young Rizal came to study. He stayed· there six years graduating in 1877 with highest honors. -469·· CHAPTER FIVE THE SPANISH REVOLUTION AND ITS RESULTS a. Background of the Revolution In 1868, an event of great historical stgnificance took place in Spain. That year tho Spanish liberals drove Queen Isabel II from her throne. The s~anish Revolution of 1868 as that event is known was the climax of the efforts of the Spanish liberals to establish a popular system of government for Spain. Queen Isabel'-s reign which begun in J.833 on th8 death of her father, Ferdinand VII, was a turbulent, one. There were rare intervals in which Spain enjoyed complete domestic peace and tranquility. Apart from the recurring Carlist wars, there were frequent revel ts and milita:-'y uprisings in which soldier politicians by means of pr_Q}lill}.S:_).a_!Tlie11tos (revolutionary manifestos) or gQ}J?es c:e e,'3tf~~:q \military co1;1ps) rose to power and held momentarily in ti1oir hands the reins of government. Being a mere child at her father's death in 1833, Isabel ruled, in accordance with Ferdinand VII's pragmatic sanction, under the regency of her mother, Queen Cristina. During Cristina's regency (183.3-1840), the internal situation in SDain wo.s tumultous and disturbed. The Carlist war ranged throughout the greater part of the period, The Carlists threatened to wrest the reins of power from Cristina and Isabel and to place Carlos on the Spanish throne. In 1834 in an effort to win the support and loyalty of the Spanish liberals, Regent Cristina promulgated the Estatuto Real of 1834. This political succession however, did not prove wholly satisfactory to the liberals. In 1836, a Liberal uprising took place as a result of which Cristina restored the Constitution of 1812. At the same time, she summoned a constituent Cortes to frame a new organic law for Spain. In 1837, the constituent Cortes adopted a new constitution. The Constitution of 1837, as this constitution ca.rie to be calJ..ed, established parliamentary government in Spain, It represented a compromise between the liberalism of the Constitution of 1812 and the conservatism of the Royal Statute of 1834. -470The new constitution was proclaimed at about the same time that the government won signal victories over the Carlists. These developments helped much to bring internal peace in S~ain. This cortdition, however, did not last long. In 1840, revolts broke out· in Barcelona and Madrid. Because of t Le gravity of the situation, Cristina was forced to abdicate as regent. General Espartero, who had gained fame nnd popularity for his successes over tho Car1ists, tooi-: over the regency of Spain. Espartero adopted strong measures to preserve and matntain law and order. In 18hl, ho crmd1ed a milit.s.ry uprising which sought to restore C~istina to the regency. In 1842, he ~lso put down with a stron~ hand a bloody revel t which hqd flared up in Barcelona. In 1Esl~3, howevGr, a number of factional groups - Progresistas, Moderados, and Eepubl.icanos, combin1.;3d to oust Espartero from power. Espartero was forced to flee from Spain. As a sequel of this ev!:mt, the regency was abolished. A resolution was then ad~pted by the Cortes Octobef 20, 1843, declaring IJabel to be of age, duly qualified to rule in her own right as c;ue'en of Spain. It Wets f 11rther declared that s:te i,;as to exerc~_se her :i."OJal powers through .. t . accor0ance ·i • ·' t'no provisions .. a respons1·b1 e m1n1s-ry in w1~I1 of the Constitution. Joaquin Iviaria Lopez, 1 ,:iad.er of the clique which overthrew Espartero, assumed. control of the government as prime minister of Spain. With the abolition of the regency and the assumption by Isabel of her royal powers and prerogatives, many people in ,Spain expected that an e!'a of peace and tr&nquility would at last dawn for Spain. Subsequent events, however, belied their hopes and expectations. Partisan groups engaged in bitter conflicts and rivalries for the privilege to run the affairs of the Nation and to dispose of ,.:;he spoils of office, Confl.:.i_cting interests and tendenc::i.es ma.de it dif::'icult for the government to adopt c:.nd follow a sustained and consistent policy forth~ solution of national prcble~s. :sabel II, on her part, proved unequal to the task before her. She could not remain entire: Y aloof .f:com the conflicts of partisan politics. On many occasions, Rile shov.1 ed favori tism and reactionary t endm1cies thereby alienating the loyalty and gooo. will of many of her subjects. The history of the twenty-five year period following Isabel II' s assumption of her rights and prerogatives as queen of Spain is a record of recurring internal troublBs,of th6 ris~ and fall of sbldier politicians: The -471administrative machinery was inefficient and corrupt because of uncertainty and insecurity of tenure of public officials. In the brief period of two years immediately following Isabel I s· accession as queen, three different persons successively occupied the premiership of Spain - Joaquin M. Lopez, Gonzales Bravo and Ramon Maria Narvaez. Narvaez' accession to power in 184h brought to the political arena one of the outstanding soldier politicians of the age of Isabel II. During his administration, Spain had a brief interval of peace and dcmestic tranquility. Conservative in his leanings 1 he sou_ght to strengthen the foundations of the Monarchy. He secured, in lSli-5, the adoption by a consetitupnt Cortes of a new constitution for Spain. The Constitution of 1845 incorporated several important features of the Royal Statute of 1834. It gave to the Crown a large me~sure of supervision and control over affairs of state. N&rvaez also arranged for the marriage, in 1846, of Queen Is~bel to her cousin Francis, Duke of Cadiz. The marriage ,arrangements were n:ade for reasons of state. It was designed to strengthen the unity and the stability of the lfonarchy. In 1854, the internal situation in Spain was again disrupted. On July 7 of tlIBt year, O'Donell launched forth a 12.ronunciatQiento demanding changes and reforms in the government. 0 1 Donell' s pronunci2mie::.1to read in part as follows: We desire the preservation of the Throne, but without.the corrupting' influence of ,any canarilla .We want the strict observance of the processes prescribed by the fundamental laws, improving them, particularly those rela t:'..ng to the electoral system and :.Preedom of the })ress. We want a revision of the taxes on the basi.s of strict economy, W(J want due respect f o:- the merit syste~ and the principle of seniority in the appointment and promotion of gov (:H'Yt:11ent employees and membe-:'.'G of the arm8d fo:i'Ces. Ke want to protect the local unitr, of the nat::i.on from the evils of excessive ce:ritrali1/;Dtion, giving them such freedom and autonomy as woL1Jd enable them to promote their own interosts and welfare. And, as a guarantee for all of these reforms, we want and demand the establishment on solid foundations of the national militia. r -472Confronted by a serious situation, Queen Isabel called back to power Espartero, who had returned to Spain from exile in 1848. Espartero formed a new ministry with O'Donell as minister of war, The plans and policies of Espartero, however, did not meet with popular approval. In July, 1856, he was once more forced to resign. 0'Done11 succeeded him. But 0' Donell himself did not remain long in power. In October, 1856, he was forced out of office. The veteran statesman, General Narvaez, once ciore took over the reins of government. At the end of two years, however, (1858) O'Donell was back in power. From 1858 to the outbreak of the Revolution of 1868, the government of Spain was alternately in the hands of O'Donell and Narvaez. That period continued to· be a tumultous one. In 1860, the Ca.rlists made another attempt, which, however, was unsuccessful, to overthrow the regime of Queen Isabel. A year later, the Republicans raised the standard of revolt. Their battle cry was "Long Live the Republic. Death to the Queen." The uprising was put down by the gove:"nment forces. In 1865, a more formidable uprising flnred up. It was lE)d by General Prim, 0' Donell who was at that time at the head of the government, put it down. In 1866 another serious revolt took place. O'Donell also suppressed it with a heavy hand. The principal leaders of the revolt were seized and executed. 0'Donell died in November, 1867. A few months later, April, 1S68, Narvaez, too, passed away. The deaths of these men removed from the pol it. ic al scene two strong personalities under whose e.dministration the .forces of subversion which wore seekin::i: the overthrow of. the Bourbon Monarchy were effectively held in check. To Gonzales Bravo, a veteran soldier politician, Queen Isabel entrusted the responsicility of running the affairs of the nation in the critical s~tuation then existing. All his efforts, howeve~~ p~oveG unavailing to stem the swelling tide of popular unrest and c.iscontent, The stern measures that he adoited to preserue law and order only aggravated the si-;-:,t:G tion. The different political groups united their forces in a concerted effort to overthrow the Queen and her ministers. The Spanish Revolution of 1868 began on September 18, 1868, when Admiral Topete issued a revolutionary J2TQI!1dl1.cia.mJ:ent,Q from Cadi.z. This was followed by uprisings in many parts of Jpain, Valencia, Tarrclgona, Barcelona joined the Revolution, On October 3, Marshal Serrano, one of the leaders of the movement entered Madrid, being received warmly and enthusiastically by a cheering and highly excited muJ.titude, There he was joined by General Prim and other prominent leaders of the Revolution. Queen Isabel by this time had fled from Spain. The triumph of the revolutionary movement was noH complete. A provisional government was set up, composed of Serrano as President; Prim, Minister of War; Topete, Minister of the Navy; Sagasta, Minister of Home Affairs; and Lorenzana, Minister of Foreign Affairs, On October 8th, the Provisional GovernmE::mt formally announced the princi.pleB on which the future· Spanish government would be organized. These were: univers3l suffrage; freedom of worship; freedom of instruction; freedom of association and of peaceful public meetinc;; freedom of the press; aclministre.tive decentralization and autonomy for local .and provincinl government; trial by jury in criminal cases; unity of jurisdiction in all branchns of judicial administration; judicial immovability; individual security and inviolability of domicile and correspondence; abolition of capital punishmentQ On the 25th of October, the Provisional Government issued a manifesto explaining what had ta!:::en place and what reforms it proposed to adopt. The manifesto stated that the monarchial form of government would be preserved and continued. In pursuance of the program of the Provisional Government, a constituent Cortes was called into session in Fobruarj, 1869, to draw up a new constitution for Spain. The new constitution as finally approved embodied the principl8S and political ideas of the leaders of the Revolution. It established a limited monarchy, recognized freedom of worship, legalized civil rnar:d.age, introduced the jury system, and solemnly guaranteed individual liberty. 1 It excluded the Bourbon fnrnily from the Spnni,sh throne. l - It is interesting to note that tn the constituont Cortes efforts were made to secure incorporation in the constitutional plan then under consideration of reforms in the system of government in the Philippines. Adelardo Lopez de Ayala. who at the time was minister of the colonies, presented a "JVIemoria" to the Cortes proposing reforms in -474The new Spanish constitution created a major problem for Spain - the selection of a new ~1ler. As on the occnsion of the extinction of the Hapsburg dynasty in 1700, this, question c"{roused deep interest ih the courts and chRncil1eries of Europe. At one time Ferdinand of SaxeCoburg, King-Dowager of Portugal, and cousin of Queen Victoria of En§,1a~1d, was. seri~)u~ly co~sidured as a po~siblu occupant oj_ tne Sparnsh tnro\ne. 1rr:mce, for sentimental and other roasons, took a vital interest in the question. Bismarck of Prussia proposed Prince Leopbld of the hohenzollcrn family a. s a poE,sible occupant, of the Sphnish throne. Bi£3marcki s move aroused_ bittr]r resentrn.ent in France and became an immediate cause of the FrancoPrussian War. In the end, Amadeo, a young8r son of King Victor. Emmanuel of Italy, c=tccepted the ofi'er tend0red him by the Spnnish Cortss to become King of Spain. On January 2, 1871, AmRdeo formaJly took his oat:1 before the meml:lcrs of the Span::i.sh Cortes as King of Spain under the Constitution of 1869. In the meantime, '.~ueen Isabel decided to· abdicate. On June 25, ld70, from P&ris, F'rance, to which she had fled shG issued t·rJO bistoric documents: one a formal act of abdication 1 and the other a letter to the Spanish people appealing for their support and loyalty to the Bourbon dynnsty. The Queen's statement of abdication read in part as follow:3: 1 ·· · the administrative system in the PhilippiDes. In April, 1869, a Eroup of Congrest,men compoL:-;od of Julian Pellon y Rodriguez, Tomas Rodl'i16ucz Pin::.11 :1, Mi::;w~l Uznri.sirr,.::t, victor BuJ.aguer, Joaqtiin Baeza: Francisco 1.Tavi·?:.:' Moya, -anJ Ruberto Fernandez de 12s Cuevas, submitted a proposal to grant greater political liberties to the i~habitan~s .of the Philippines, In the session of the Cort.f;S h~'lld on May 2_5, 1869, Julian Pellon epoke in.support of the prbposal. None of the proposals, however, wns approved, Lopez de Ay,1la 1 s !IMemoria 11 and thr-3 "Proposal II submit· ted by ?.eJ.lon .2nd l1is o.srrnciates aro cited by HetJ.rW. in his Apci:i:_at_o b:;.bl ior:raf.~.,, vol. 2, nos, 1215 and 12~:2, respectively. 1 - Rubio, Qll• .£;it., vol. 6, appenq.ix, -475To all Spaniards of my kingdom and to all who may see and understand these presents: KNOW ALL: Thc1t for the sole purpose of procuring, by peaceful and legitimate means the happiness and welfare of my beloved Spain, I execute this solemn declaration in the form allowed by these difficult and extraordinary circumst~nces. I abdicate voluntarily and spontaneously, moved solely by my love for Spain and for her welfc.re and independence, the royal nuthority which I have exercised by the Grace of God and of the Constitution of the Spanish Monarchy, promulga.ted in the year 1845, and to renounce all my political rights, transferrh:g them all to my most beloved son, Don Alfonso, Prince of Asturias. That I do not intend to renounce any o.f the rights ~~t·J V~ ~e~pA ~r nI'0"8rand Prero . ,c)'--',. ·~•.) ~i+~ vv_ • ~ .:> .•,L: t v J D'Y J.10llce •. u , i:·· }' ties, and farni2.y·, which are bestowed upon me by the laws of the land, particularly the Luw o.f iviay 12, 0 0 .Jal 1 H 1 1$65. That in this sense, as long as I live, and as my last will with respect to my family and children, I reserve all the powers that I ara cap:1ble of, and will continue to exercise them &s though I did not abdicate my poJ.itical. rights and the supreme power of Queen of the Spanish dominions. That I mean to preserve, even after my abdication, the care and custody of my son, Don Alfonso, to whom I transfer my political rights, and the ca:re and custody of his sLsters, not yet emancipated from the paternal jurisdiction, including all the powers that correspond to me in accordance with artic1o 63 of the Constitution of 1845 of the Spanish !'for:archy, and o.f Laws, 2, 3, 4, and 13, Title 16 of itPru 6, That with respect to my son, Don Alfonso, until he is proclaimed by a Goverr::.ment and Cortes which represent the genuine legitimate will of the Nation, I will not surrender him to the care of those who by the will of the Nation are to protect and advise him. -476Isabel's letter to the Spanish people read in part as follows:2 Misfortune and sadness marked the long period of my reifn. It is painful for me to realize that acts indupendent of my will thvn1rte<.l my noblest aspircttions j my most VL'3he.nent desi:r·es for the happiness of my beloved Spain. As a girl, thousands of heroes proclaimed my name; but the rr.:tvages of oar s:.1rrounded my cradle. As an adolescent, I always favored such propositions as I sincerely believed would advance your happiness. But heated party struggles did not allow time for the rootage in the nationcil character of reApect for laws and J. ove for prudent :" eforms. The tumultous passions of m,.:m, which I have not wunted to combat at the cost; of yov.r blood, have brought me to this foreign land, far from the throne of my fathers, to tt.is land ~ihich, friendly, hospitable, and illustrious, t~ough it be, is not my beloved country nor the country of my children. Such is, in brief, the po~itical history of the thirty-fivo years in which! have exercised the supreme power over the peoples whom God, the laws, and the will of the Nation ent.ru9ted to mJ care, Reviewing it, I can conscientiously say that I have not contributed, with de1:Lberate intention, to the evils for which I am blamed, or to the misfortunes which I w2s unGble to avc3rt, As a CDnstitutional Queen, I have sincerely respected the fundarr"ental laws, Speniard before anything else, and loving mother o~ the sons of Sp3in, I have a warm af.fection for all. Tbe misfortunes which oft8n threatened to Cl'ush my s-:)j_rit v1ere ·oorn3 by 'ne as best I could, Nothing hZ7.El been mo:.~e plea[:ant to my heart than to pardo:.:1 &nri to re1,v2,rd, .::,rd ·1 have never failEid to take any measure to pJ~event what by me miGht brir:g sorrow upon my subjects. Twenty months have nnssed sinc0 I stepped on foreign soil. ln th(rne twcntJ months, my aff1ic·ted spirit has never been in attentive to the sobbings -477of my unforgettable Spain. Full of confidence in her future, anxious for her greatness, her integrity, and her independence, grateful for the votes of those who are devoted to me, for9;etful of the injuries inflict0d by those who do not know me, I aspire for nothing except that which my heart fondly desires and which loyal Spaniards would gladly accept, namely, the int·,egrity of the dynasty and the welfare of the heir to the Spanish Throne. This is the act of which I speak to you. This is the best proof that I can give you of the affection I have always had for you. Know, therefore, that in virtue of a solemn act drawn up in my residence in Paris and in the presence o.f the members of my Royal fumily, of grandees, dignitaries, generals and public men of Spain, I have abdicated my royal authority and my political rights, transmitting them ,::tnd all that bt;longs to the throne 6f Spain, to my vory dear son, Don Alfonso, Prince of Asturias. In accordance with the country's laws, pEirticularl y th8 law of May 12, 1865, I reserve for myself all the civil rights, the personal status and the dignity which these concede to me. Hence, I shall have under my guardianship and cmitody Don Alfonso while he resides outside of his country until, proclaimed by a Government and a Cortes repre:rnnting the legitimate will of the Nation, I am to surrender him to you. In the meantime, I shall E,ndeavor to implant in his mind generous and elevated ideas which, toeether with his natural inclinations, would, I trust, make him worthy to wear the crown of San Fernando and to succeed the Alf6nsos, his predecessors, from whom the country has received tt legacy of imperishable glories, Alfonso XII will have to be, therefore, from now on your real King, the, King of the Spanish people, not the King of a party. Love him with the same sincerity with which he loves you. Respect and protect his youth with the unbreakable fortitude of your noble heerts, while I, with fervent prayer, ask the Almighty to grant long days of peace and prosperity for Spain, and to concede to my son, whom I bless, wisdom, prudence, rectitude in the govf,rnment, and better chances of success in the Throne than whnt was enjoyed by his unfortunate mother, who was your Queen. ISABEL. -47Sb. Effects of the Spanish Revolution upon the Philippines Administration of de la Torre, 1$69-1871 Following the overthrow of Isabel II in the Revolution of J.868, the Provisional Government of Spain under Serrano and Prim sent Carlos MElria de la Torre as 12:overnor and captain general of the Philippines. The stor~ of his administration is given by Montero y Vidul in the work repeatedly citc;d in these Readings:l On the 23rd of June, 1869, D. Carlos Maria de la Torre assumed his post as Chief Executive of the Philippines. This man lacked the qualifications demanded by the circumstances, and his unwise conduct and unsound policy endenred him to those whose ambition was to detach from Spain the remnants of her former colonial empire. ! 1 It is necessary," was the remark of one of these 1 "that the Government should select able and trustworthy men to advance the cause of the Revolution in the colonies. For·::,m1ately, the Ministry has chosen a man for the Philippines who inspires full faith and confidence; for D. Carlos Maria de la Torre is a proven liberal, nay a sincere radical, - a man whose services, intentions, energetic character, and exc~llent education make him highly respectable, and which cause cJ.S to expect that under his regime, individunl rights will be respected in the Philippines. There is peace and tranguility· in the Ar6hipelago and de la Torre will find no difficulty in carrying out the liberal policy of the new government against whatever opposition from the regular clorgy and the sm.qlJ. circle of monopolizers, who hava alwnyr; stood against the liberty of the Philippines. 11 Rafael Maria de La bra. La Torre brou,~ht with him to 'Manila the colonel of artillery D. Francisco Sanc'.(iiz, and Mrs. Sanchiz (Maria del Rosario Gil de Montes). - - 1 - Chapters 24, 25, 26 of volume 3 deal with the ad- ministration of de la Torre and of his successor, Governor Izquierdo. -479Ignorant of the country he had come to govern; believing in good faith that the Revolutionary Government at home obliged him to implant in the Philippines a democratic regime; surrounded and influenced by an imbecile camarilla; fluttered by the servile praises of those sagacious Filipinos) who, proclaiming their liberalism and love for Spain, hailed him as their liberator from supposed tyrannies, la Torre began to show, both in his private and official acts, a most imprudent conduct, to the satisfaction of his perfidious counsellors. One of the lamentable errors of De la Torre was to pose as a democrat, thinkinE, fo please thereby, the Filipinos. He suppressed the guard of halberdiers which, for the honer of the representative of Spain, was retained in the palace since 1591; he appeared in public without any escort, and used an ordinary straw hat instead of the top-hat which the authorities usually used here. Patronized by the inexperienced civil governor ..of Manila, Don Jose Cabezas de Herrera, a serenade was held in the evening of the 12th of July in honor of Gov. La Torre, which bore all the characteristics of a political manifestation. At the head of the parade was a commission fori::1ed by various Filipino Spaniards and Chinese·rnes':-izos, of native priests, students, and some offic:~als of the districts of Sta. Cruz, Quiapo and Sampaloc.2 The general and Mrs. Sanchiz entertr-dned well the participants; during the buffet toasts were off€rred, while Mrs. Sanchiz recited a poem. 2 - The men composing this commission were: Don Joaquin Pardo de Tavera, Consejero de Administ:.racion and Pro .. fessor of Spanish Law; D. Jose Icaza, subst,itute magistrate of the Audiencia; D. Jocobo ZobGl, Reg:i..dor of the Ayuntamiento; D. Ignacio Rocha, artist; D. Angel Garchitorena, carriage manufacturer; Andres Nieto, proprietor; Jos~ Cafias, landed proprietor; Jose Burgos, curate of the Manila Cathedral; Vicente Infante, Military chaplain; D. Juan Reyes, employee; D. Manuel Genato, and M. Maximo Paterno, Chinese mestizos. Among the participants there was noted the total absence of Peninsulars and even of Filipino-Spaniards of note in the country such as the Azcarragas, Vizmanos, Arrietas, Tenazon, Calderones, Calves, etc. It is to be noted also that the act was illegal for the Constitut lon ha.d not yet gone into effect, and the law in force then in t,he PhiJ.i_pp~Lnes prohibited manifestations of that natu1·e, especially as this one was held .in the evening, a thing w!:r.ich the Constltution did not allow even in the Penins'..lla. From that moment, the Filipino .t.§de!}lorists commenced the work of propaganda against Spain. Governor de la Torre, by decree of July 7, 1869t suppressed flogging as the punishment for desertion among native soldiers, and substituted for it one month's imprisonment. In an address made by La Torre upon taking possession of h:i_s office, he had announced that he would exterminate bE.r1ditry, but as it was a pleasure to pardon errors and to call back to right conduct tho~e who had deviated from -the :right way, he reserved to hj_mself the rigl"it to tuke ,vhatever measures he thought proper. In effect, he v,ent to Imus and arr.3.nged to make Camerino, the famous bancit, captain of a company of "Guias de la 'rorre," vd.th power to assist the Guardia Civil. On the 21st of September, 1869, the pew Constitution was sworn to in I,Ianila. 'ro commemorate the occasion, the Governor held a reception in his palace to which he invited several mcsti~:.os from the districts of Santa Cruz, San Miguel, Binondo and Quiapo, 1t, ho marched to the po.lace at the head of a pQrade with banners, music and lanters, under the lead of P. Burgos, Pardo de Tavera and Paterno. The majority of th(;)se wore red ties -- color which Mrs. Sanchiz made fashionab:-'...e. Mrs. Sane Liz who as usual,. acted as hostees, appeared with a rjbo~n on her head on which were written the wo::-ds ir:song ~.'..ive the Sovereign People" (Viva el pueblo sobera~o), with another ribbon around her neck, on one extremity of which were the words, "Long live libert:r" (Viva la libertad) t and on the other 11 10:n.2: live General La Torre" (Viva el general la TorreJ. 1 The guests were well entertained by the Governor and by Mrs. Sanchiz, in whose honor the car- riage manufacturer Garchitorenat recited a few laudatory verses. La Torre appeared on the balcony and in a loud voice proclaimed, "Long Live the Constitutional Cortes." The scandal which the affairs produced was monumental, and the Peninsulars who were .familiar with the country were grieved to see the representative of Spain and. his camarilla encouraging and consenting to such ridiculous spectacles, the future consequence of which could-not be hidden. · Under date of November 6, 1$70, a d_e.cree was promulgated on the recommendation of the Minister of the Colonies, Segismundo Moret, creating the Philippine Institute, a school of secondary instruction. According to article 13 of this decree, the existing colleges -- San Jos~, Ateneo Municipal, San Juan de Letran, Nautical Academy, and Academy of Design, Painting and Accounting&:, Languages, were to cease as such and to be fused in the Ir:.stit ut e. 'I'he present Normal School was to remain as it was. The Institute was to be administered by a director to be appointed by the Government. All teaching positions were to be filled by competitive examination. Another decree of the same date provided for the conversion of the Royal and Pontifical University of Sto. Tomas into the University of tr10 Philippines, in which instruction was to be given in theology, law, medicine and pharmacy. Some of the important provisions of this decree are: "The University shall be directed by a Rector to be appointed by the Government from among the professors of the same. The present r:.ec':.or of the College of Sto. Tomas shall remain dean of the Department of theology, with aJ.l the ri:?;hts and privileges which he at present enjoys. (Art. 11). "Teaching positions in the departments of law, medicine and pharmacy shall be filled by competitive examinations. Those in the department of theology shall remain as they are. (Art. 12). -482On the arrival here of these decrees, considerable alarm was aroused among the religious orders, especially among the Dominicans, who were most affected by them. The provincial of the order, Dr. Pedro Payo, presented a memorial on.the 15th of February, 1871, setting forth the difficulties that would arise with the execution of the orders of the home government the services rendered by the Dominicans, and the validity of thc-;:i.r titles to the University and the College of San Juan de Letran. Moreover, the memorial claimed that by this reform the University would lose its ecclesiastical character, and its students, as a consequence, would not be able to obtain the degrees necessary for appointment to the prebendaries. Governor de la Torre, how~ver, in February 1871, placed his cumplase on these decrees. -483- CHAPTER SEVEN THE CAVITE AFFAIR OF 1872 1) Background of the Affair on the Question of the Philippine Curacies At the time the Spanish Liberals took over the reins of power in Spain foJlowing the overthrow of Queen. Isobel II, a heated controversy was raging in the Philippines over the question of the status and ownership of certain cur~cies in the archbishopric of Manila. The fundamental issue in the controversy was whether Filipino priests should be allowed greuter participation in the managern1:mt of the religious and ecclesiastical affairs of their country or not. This was a quostion which concerned the interests and welfare, not only of the native clergy, but of the Catholic Church herself. The beginnings of this quEistion may be traced to the times of Archbishop Sta. Justa and Governor Anda in the last quarter of the 18th century (1767-1776).1 To fill the vacancies which were created at that time in many parishes of his dice es e, Arc hb is hop Sta. Justa availed himself of the services of newly ordained Filipino secular priests. The latter were placed in curacies which had been vacated as a result of differences and misunderstandin~s between the Spanish friar curates who previously administered them and the Archbishop over matters of ecclesiastical government. The significance of the Archbishop's actuation was quite clear to many people at the time. Archbishop Sta. Justa's course was a radical departure from the longestablished policy followed in the administration of parishes. It meant that, ultimately, Filipino secular priests would take over the duties and responsibiJ.ities connected with the administration of parochial affairs. It can well be presumed that Archbishop Sta. J·usta envisioning such an eventuality, felt keenly the need of building up a body of competent Filipino priests to carry on the work of the Catl10lic Church in the Philippines. Unfortunately for the cause of the Filipino clergy, the immediate results of Archbishop Stc.l. Justa 1 s initial policy of secularization of the curacies were quite discouraging and disappointing. Many of the newly installed Filipino parish priests lacked, not only the necessary training and p~eparation for parochial work, but also the moral aualities reouired o.f those who vJould go into the religious life. Their conduct cl.'.., pa:t:L;:;h prj_ests was far from edifying, It was clear tlw.t A:tchbishop Sta. Justa, in his eagerness and enthusiasm tu Fi1ipini:;,;e the curacies, did not exercise due c1n·e in the gr1.ntins of holy orders and that he appointed newly ordained seminarians to parishes without careful examination of their fitness and character. In view of the unfavorable results of his policy, it was felt advisable, ~n the ~nterest of religion, to have it suspended and discontinued. Governor Anda, who was a strong beliE'ver in the wisdom and desirability of that policy, ,and who had given wholehearted support to Archbishop Sta. Justa's efforts to Filipinize the curacies was constrained to reverse his stand on the matter. He wrote to the King.reporting the unfavorable effects which Archbishop Sta. Justa I s actuations had produced and be recommended that the Filipinization of the curacies be suspended and that the cura ::ies which had been secularized be returned to tho Spanish regular clergy. In compliance . with Anda's recommendations, the King of Spain-in a decree promulgated on December 11, 1776, ordered the Guspension of the secularization of the curacies and the restoration of those parishes which had been given to Filipino priests to their former pastors. 1 The suspension of the Filipinization policy, however, was presumed to be only temporary. One of the provisions of the decree of December 11, 1776, ordered tha.t steps should be taken ·to prepare and train a competent body of clerics so that the .f.Lll:i.ng of the curacies with Filipino secular priests wou~d eventually be effectE'd in conformity with the plans and desires of Archbishop .Sta. Justa. This was understood at the time to inean that the seci11arization of the curacies would be resumed, 1-vhen r:rncl if, duly qualified Filipino secular priests were available for appointment to trhe curacies. Unfortunately, tho Spanish Government did not comply with the directive contained in th,1.t provision of the decree of December 11, 1776. Far from living up the promise im- -485plied in that law, it adopted and put into effect a course of action which tended to discouragn the growth and developrnei;it of the Filipino clergy. A number of laws promulgated by the Spanish Government in the nineteenth century reflected this tendency of Spanish colonial policy. On July S, 1826, a royal cedula was issued reiterating the previous decree which commanded the return to the regular Spanish clergy of the curacies which h:Hi b0.en given to _Filipino secular prie.':)ts during the ~ov12rnorship of Anda (1770-1776). 'The royal decree of March 9, lt1h9, ordered the return of a number of parishes in Cavite to the Spanish regnlclr clergy. Finally on September 10, 1861, a royal order gave to the R<:')Collects parishes held by Filipino priests in the Archbishopric of Manila. The·reaction which was aroused in the Philippines by the foregoing acts was discussed at length by Archbishop Meliton Mart~nez in a letter which he wrote to Spain. This letter reflects the attitude and policy of the authorities of the Catholic Church in the Philippines on the auestion relating to the Philippine curacies.· It was written at the time the Spanish Liberals came into power in Spain following the overtt.row of Queen Isabel II in th1.~ RevoJ.ution of 1.568: 2 S i r : 'rhe undersigned, Archbishop of Manil3, respectfully addresses your Exe ell ency, impelled by his true love o:' country, and by a sense of duty to maintain the tranquility of his Jiocese, which has been frequently disturbed as a result of the practice, which for some time now has been followed, of turning over curacies administered by the secular clergy to the religious corporatj_ons. This policy is the cause of an ever growing enmity which is becoming more and more manifest between seculars and regulars, and which, sooner or later, may bring lamentable results to our beloved Spain. To fix the origin of this enrrit;r, I shall mention the Real Cedula of July 8, 1826, which returned to the reliiious corporations curacies administered by the secular clergy since the period of - - 2 - Thi~ letter is quoted by Artigas in his work, Los ~esos de 18_1?., pp. ll+-31. It is published also in CroigBenitez, .2P.• .2,it,., under the title "Archbishop i•1nrtinez' S~cret De.fens e of His Filipino CJ. ergy." -486the second governorship of Simeon de Anda y Salazar. However just this measure might appear, the native priests, considering the fact that they had held those curacies for more than half a century and ,considered them their own, felt grieved every time a curacy by reason of the death or transfer of the incumbent was assigned to a regu.J.a.r prJ.est. With the death of the curate of San Sic0~ w~ich occurred this year, the purpose of the foregoing Real Cedula has been fulfilled in every respect. As a circumstance tending to aggravate this enmity the Royal Order of March 91 ii49, may be mentioned, by virtue of which seven curacies of Covite belonging to the secular clergy wer·e gi·•ren to the regularG, as follows: Bacoo:c, Cavite el Viejo and Silang to the Agustinian RecoJ.lec~s; and San-i;n Cruz, San Fran9isco de Malabon, Naic and Indang to the Dominicans. Of thes0, five have already been occupied, being taken possession of as fnst as they become vacant. But what brouirht thr3 anta.r:onism to a climax and filled the native clergy with inrl~gnation was the Royal Order of Septembnr 10, 1861. To this decree and its consequences, tLe undersigned especially desires to call the attention of your Excellency. With the approval in article 13 of the Hoyal Decree of July 30, 1859, regarding tbe est&blishment of the Government of Jv1:indo.nao, of the a r:..,...nng em8nt that the F'athers of the Society o.f J·esus r;bou.ld take charge of the ed.ministration o:f tho parishes, doctrinas, and active missions in that Island, which at the time were under the administration of the Recollects of the Province of San Nicolas de Tolentino, it. became necessary to promul~ate the rules which should govern, in a proper manner, the cc1rryinc; o,ut of the provisions of that article ,3 For this purpose, the R.oynl Order of September 10, l/.561, was pro- 3 - The Royal Decree referred to here created a politico-military form of government for the island 0f Min· danao. lJndor this decree, Mindanao, including the adja..:. cent islands, was divided into six districts, each to be governed by a military officer havir:.g the rank of brigadier, Governor Lemery placed his "cumplasE: 11 to this decree February mulgated which, among other things, granted to the Recollects, in the form of an indemnity, the odministration of the curacies in the province of Cavite or elsewhere ( in the Archbishopric of Manila, as subsequently was ordered) which were being served by the- native clergy.4 It is interesting to note the circumstances under which this Royal Order was issued. In the first place, the Archbishopric was v2cant, and, under the circumstances, the sacred cannons prescribe, and prudence counsels, that no innovation be introduced.5 In the second place, the opinion of the ordinary ecclesiastical authority (autbridad ordinaria ecclesiastica) was not heard in this particular case, although here the practici is to h~ve voluminous reoorts even in cases of much less importance. And, in the third place, it was known 21, 1861, and promulgated regulatlons for puttj ng tb.e decree into execution • . According to these regulations, the inauguration of the new governmeat in Mindanao was to take place April 1st, 1861. 4 - The Recollect Order filed vigorous protests, both in Manila and in Madrid, against the Royal Decree of July 30, 1859, especially against that provision of it which transferred to the Fathers of the Society of Jesus the Recollect missions and doctrintts in Mindanao, 'rhe Provincial of the' Order in Man:.la ser.:t a long memor::i.al to Governor Lemery, who was then Governor and Captain General of the Philippines, in which he set forth, among other things, the accomplishments o.f the Recollocts in M~;_nclanao einr~e the year 1622, and the advisability, in the interest of tha country and of the Catholic religion, of their continuing in their posts in Mindanao, in view of their fitness for the task of evangelizing that region; by rGason of their knowledge of its conditions and of the lar.guage, customs and usages of its inhabitants. The Governrri•:Jnt, considering the protest of the Recollects wel1-founc1ed, made a recommendation, to the effect that the Reco1lf:icts be "compensated II for their loss of the Mindaneo m:i.s sions and doctrinas with curacies in the Archbishopric of ~anila administered by the nativo clergy. The recommenc at ion was accepted by Her Majestyts Government and omtodied in the famous Decree of September 10, 1861. (Seo Mont0-ro y Vidal, Q£, £i~., vol. 3). 5 "" The predecessor of Archbishop Martinez was Rev. Fr. Aranguren, who died April H1, 1862. Pending the arrival -488tho.t the ecclesiastic appc,inted to tt~e Diocese of Manila was not familiar with the anomaJ.ou.s condition of the ecclesiastical administration of the Philippir:es, or with the customs and usages of the people (circumstances which would impel him to renounce the post and which he had to disregard only because of s-::.rong representations made to him), and that, therefore, it must take him some time before he could remonstrate with full knowled-re of the facts. These circumstances are brought to the impartial judgment of Your ~xcellency. ~ When the undersigned took possession of the Archbishopric towards the end of May, 1862, he found the native clergy deeply aroused, and ho was strongly urged to ask for the repeo.l of the Order of September 10, 1861. He did not allow himself to be influenced, eithe1:1 by insister:.ce or by requests, but, on the contrary, fully convinced then that the Central Governn1ent had strong and solid. rensons for taking a st0p of such ir-rportt".nce, he dec:lded to enforce it as he has c.o,rn, happily and cor:1pletely. If he courteously opposed the adjudication to the Recollect Fathers of the curacy of AntipoJ.o, it was because he considered thc:.t their exaggerated claim was not warranted by the Royel Order;~ and he could not have been in error in his decision for the Council of State ·was in accord :vith him, as may be seen from the Royal Order o:: Kay 19 which used ·0he for1:1u~~, 11 Heard in. t~e Co1;:ncil of S~~~ce?" "":hi,?h simply inaicates a decision contrary to ~heir advice. MoreovE::r, after a long res:f_dff,:ce · in the co,_1ri.t:r'y 1 , with some knowled~e of the ecclesiastical cor~ition and administration, anc. of persons anc:i thine_s, the undersigned now sees with greeter clearness that the complaints of the native priests are r1ot 1·.i::_tr.011t foundation; that it is necessary to have -che Royn1 Order of September 10, 1861, conform to t-te rules of justice and equity; and that a consic:r:)rat:.on of its results lGads one to conclude tl~at, it. does not wholly conform to the requireme:r::-':.s of a 1.1vise policy. These considerations will be discussed brief-1.y. ----·--of Archbishop Martinez) who was appointed s'uccessor of Archbishop Aranguren, the archbishopric wo.s governed by Dr. Pedro Pelaez. The Ecclesiasti~al Cabildo appotnted him .Yi· cario capitnlar, sede vacante to govern the vacant see. ,--- -489The Supreme Government was within its rights in entrusting to the well-known zeal of the Fathers of the Society of Jesus the administration of the curacies and missions of Mindanao. In this respect it is authorized by the laws governing the Royal Patronage as found in the Laws of the Indias. It is also worthy of praise the effort to reward the services of the Recollect Fathers and to ~rant them some compensation for the loss of their ~eligious establishments in Mindanaq, for, al though many of these were created by the early Jesuits, the former have long been administering them and have become sole possessors by right of prescription. But, if the fact had also been considered that 'the native priests who, in all vicissitudes,have always remained faithful subjects of 3pain, deserve as much recognition, and that as coadjutors in the parochial ministry they shoulder the hardest part of the work, -- no action would have been taken tending to aggrieve a class so meri~orious, just to compensate another class, and that a mo:ce gentle and equitable means could have been used to satisfy the needs of the Goverr;ment. Tho Diocese of Cebu itself, within whose jurisdiction the wnole Island of :Mindanao was included, would hardly tave offered any difficulty, as, in conformity to equityj parishes belonging to other regulars would not be offered in compensation to the RecolJ.ects, to whom fo:-meI'lY all the curacies of the Island of Negros, belonging to the secular clergy, were c~ded because of lack of secular priests. The number of narishes in the above-mentioned Diocese was two hundred and thirty-sevon, of which forty-seven belonged to the secular clergy. The poor condition of its seminary, the lack of professors and the ignorance of the Spanish language, the knowledge of which ,;,,ms indispensable in the study of Latin and moral theology, not only hindered the formation of a competent body of priests for the n~anagement of the curacies in question, but also preven~ed the advancement of those who, as coadjutors, belp the curates in the administration of the sacraments and the care of tte sick. That Seminary justly deserves being considered a college, because the natives go to it for the purpose of studying the Spanish language, and most of them leave school as soon as they acquire a smattering of that language. It is enough to say that there were, as there still are at present, within the old jurisdiction of the Bishooric of Cebu, towns where the -490barrios are so distant from one another and where the spiritual administration of a population of sixteen thousand or more souls rest with a lone religious, who usually is far advanced in years. In such a case, there is no doubt but that its zealous prelate would have welcomed the ass:Lstance of twentyseven reli,gj_ous who v./Ol:..ld take cl,ars<; cf that number of Curacies 1 as th::t·:, 1"i0Uld h2Y8 o;:vfousJy ir.:.proved the parochial administration, and st~ll there would remain twenty-one parishes with which to reward those coadjutors wto, by their virtue, knowledge and iz~ustry, distinguish themselves among their scanty number. While it·J.acks the oersonaJ. necessary to attend to all the spiritual necessities of the faithf•J.l, the present staff being hardly suf.::icient to attc:nd under ordinary circumstanc:es t0 more urgent cases, thG archbishopric of Manila is just the opposite of the Bishopric of C3bu. In tb.e Arch".)5.shopric, there were at the time one milJ. ion four tundred t:1ousa::.1d in:1abi tant s with one hunc.r·e'.i ninetJ-·o:1e parishes ser1ed ty both clergies. V:i.t:.:.1 the deductJ.cns from t):1e number of curacies belonging to -~he Dative clergv by virtue of the Real Cedula J..2~'6, of those which~;vere ~o be delivered to the Recollects and the Dominicans under the Royal Order of 181:-9, as WHl)_ as of t:19 twe;1ty-seven with which, according to t ..,e Order of Sepcember 10, 1861, the Recollects are "'.:io be compensated for the delivery to the Jesuits of thej_r curacies i.n Mindanao, there wquld remain only twP.l ve parishes with which to reward deserving coadjutcrsa The rriests of this class are, corr;pared :.o tt.ose of C:ebu 9 vr::·cy numerous. There is not a s :Lr;gl e cu.r-ac:~, out of e 1i ery four, having a population of a~ least four tbous&nd, that does not ha 'Te a cca :i_jut-or, wbil e larser ones have a corresponciir:.gJ. :7 la:cger number; for e~:arn::_:ilej tr1ose hnving at least eight thousand have two; those having at 1 east twelve thciur::ani 7 three; and so 0n up to Taal which has seven coadjutors. 6 rlut le·~ us continue the of 6 - It is interesting to note i~ this connection the f'?llo~~n0 f~gures, ~::'.'-?m. the :Qic_H.2-Q.Q~.r~~£LrJ§~C'P:T_§.:f.1.£2_:-_~s~ad!§.: t 1c o :-b,J_:f~Ql'.l:C Q__q_~_Eb:,..,;; P}Jl9~'l, by .ot.:c e-:.a y .dl'c:J. vo, regard 1r:g the curaJies of the Philippines abou~ the Lliddle of the nineteenth century. These figures are given in the appen- -491comparison: If, in Cebu, there ·are few that understand the Spanish language, there are many that speak j_t in Manila and in the neighboring p;:'cvinc;es; and in contrast to the poverty of the se;n:i.nary :Ln the former, 0 to 1~-;-·'-,,r t'ne TTr,·'·rrer•c:·i~·-•rpOID;e.S there_, cl~re 1·n the ... a v u .. .! ..L . ..,~. j Of' _._ U .lct , the College of San Juen de Let.2ar: ac.d the Ccllege of San Jose~ wt.e:re nume:rons sti..,;c29 1.-i-1·,t, are E,tudy:ing Latin, philosophy, theology, E:ac::·ec}. cs.nons. Nor sliould I fail to mention bere the Serr.ina.ry of San Carlos, although, on account of the diff:.r.;ul ties mentioned. in a separate memorial, it is not up to the standard demanded by the importance of the capital of the Archipelago, which is reduced and maintained for Spain principally by the ties of relig:i.on,,. Do not t'he foregoing cons:l.derations require that the Recolleci..:;s be compensateci with curacies in the Diocese of Cebu and not with those of Manila? ~ dix to the llicciQQ.~~i.o. 28 .. ,J i.... ..... -. .1 QI .L They are reproduced in B.~ R., vol. . In the Archbishopric of Manila, there were 185 curacies, of which 111 were held by regulars and 62 by seculars .. In the Bishopric of Cebu, of the 170 curacies in t!rn d=tocese, 112 were served by regulars and 56 by seculars. In the Bis:w:pr:i.c of Nueva Caceres, there were 103 curaci.es, 3h of wt:ich were admi!l.istered by regulars a~1d 54 ·o:r eec:i:.lars. In the 13.Lshopric 0f Nueva Segovia t-;hcre were 124 curacies, 80 of which were und e:c regulars and 20 under secu12.l'Sc There were, therefore, ~62 cu~acies in the Philippines about tne miJdle o.f the !J_:;.r.,eteen century, of which 337 wore served by regular priests and 192 by secular priests. In 1870, according to Le.Roy, the number of PhiJ.ippine curacies was 792, of which 611 were adm:i.nist:.ered by regular ~riests and 181 by secular priests, al~ost 3~1 of whom be~ng Filipinos. (Le Roy, Th§ Anif::l:iGa.E,2 _i:Ll.l:1~1'J:il.i£P.in~, ol • I, p • 60 ~ ) . -492Nor does the spirit which inspired the Royal Order of September 10, 1861, appear to be in conformity with justice and equity, judging from the comparison made by the native priests of the missions and curacies surrendered by the RecoJ.leots with ~tose which they receive in ret;_1rn in this t.rchbi_shopric. If Your Excellency wiJl have the goori:1sss to rw-t;e the accompanying staterre;'.1,:s, I am su:.'e you will agree with them, and, w:1t.h them also wiil obser-(re, tl-1at if to the word i-nqerg;i~-ty, which sign3-fies :ceparation for damages incurred, is given the broader meaning which the results imply, -z.here would be many who would want to sustain some dame.ge just to receive tenfold the value of their loss~ :t is to be noted that wbile the 0uracy of Antipo1o has a small population, such is the devotion of the people to the Virgin tha.t is venerated there, so great is the at-tendance dur-ing the mo:'1.th of May to this famous sanctuary, · and so numerous and valuabl~ are the gifts offered in the masses, that_it has become known as the pearl of the Philippine curacies, as one,.,of the most fertile curacies in the wt0le Archipelago.I It is nmt surprising, therefore, that 7 - Montero y Vidal, Q.Jl• polo episode, says: ill•, writing about the Anti- The curacy of Antipolo, in the district of M6rong, is known to be one of the richest curacies in the Philip?ines, because of the crowded pilgrimage which every year takes place in that sanct~ary, and because of the offerings, alms, rna.Eses, cons-umption of tallow candle, sale of scapula~i~s 1 etc., etc., which piigr~ms make during the novena. The curate of tbis ~own died, a~d the capitular vica:.--, -~: 2,,le_._:ya -:;a_r:!~~ 1 appo .Lnt ed t erq::o:::--a:ril y D. Francisco Ca.1,1!JD",as, a native p::..~isst, January 13, 1862. The Provincial of the Recollect Order, considering that, under the Royal Dec:cee of S8ptc~mt-er 10, 1861, Antipo:o properly belonged to the R8collect Order, suomitted three names of merr;bers of his Order for appointment to the curacies of Mainit and Anti9olo., Of these, Fr. Franci2co Viilas was appointed to the latter placs Jt:_ly ;-..4, 1862. But the Government_, having been advj_sed b::,- the ecclGsia;;tical Cabildo that the question of whether Antipolo -493the native priests should deeply feel its loss, nor are they wanting in reason in claiming that the Royal Order of May 19, 1864, is not in conformity with that of September 10, 1861~ In addition to .the f~cts herein set forth, which have served to create and to foment t ~e animosi·Sy and antagonism of the secular clergy against the regular clergy, mention may ba rr,ade of a.:nother so that your Excellency may ha vo full understanding of the discontent of the native priests. To fill the vacancy in the parish of San Rafael, province of Bulacan, · caused by the death of the curate thereof, announcmnents were· made for the· ho2.ding of a competitive examination. The announcements rcrrnined posted up to February 17, a period of seventy days. The examination was held on the 21st, 22nd, and 23rd, the seventeen competitors being examined in accordance with the method prescribed by Pgpe Benedict XIV. The literary exercises were already terminated and the list of eligib+es prepared which was presented to the ------propei-·ly belonged to the Recollects or not was still under consideration, annulled, by decree of August 9, 1862, the appointment made in favor of Fr. Villas. However, upon the receipt of the Royal Orders of June 20, and July 21, 1862, commanding full compliance with the Order of September 10, 1861, the Superior Government of the Islands, i!l a resolution of December 22, 1862, ordered tho Provincial of the Recollects to present &new a list (terna) of candidates for appointment to the curacy of Antipolo. The former list was recub:::rd.tted and Dr. Villas was again appointed" This man presented himscJ.f before the Archbishop to rJccive the colation and canonical institution, but the latter, &fter pronouncing thJ custor:iary formula, conferred the title under protest, dGclaring that the question as to who should administer the curacy was going to be elevated for decision by the Government of Her Maj.es-sy. The indignation of the Archbishop, the ecclesiastical Cabildo and the native priests know no bounds~ P. Campmas presented various expositions to provo his r:'._ght to the curacy, while the members of th2 Cabi1d.o, e~ope~i:1::..ly the ex-Vicar P ~ Pelaez, munaged to v,iin to thet·" side the new Archbis top and the Bishops, Fr e EorruaJ.do X:Lrneno, Bishop of Cebu, and Fr. Francisco Gainza, Bishop of Nueva Cacerqs, both of the regular clergy. -494Vice Regal Patron on the second of March, but the day before that the Diocesan Prelate received a communication from the former, with a statement from the Provincial Vicar of the calced Agustinians that the curacy in question should be given to the Recollect Order. The undersigned immediately replied bGgging the Vice Royal Patron not to set aside the list of eligibles (la terna}, on the ground· that the secv.lar clergy was in possession of the curacy, that the ~ompetitors have acquired a right to it by the holdir,g of examination, and that the claim on the curacy had not been presented in due time. The Vtce Regal Patron was given to understand that the action recommended by the undersigned be taken without pr8judice to the consideration later of the question raised by the Reverend Vicar Provincial which relates to the ownership of the curacy. The request was, however, denied on the ground that that would be prejudging the question and would confuse the right of possession with that of ownership. He was made to·see clearly his error, but he replied that the Vice-Regal Patron was not in the habit of changing a decision once, made. · The question of ownership did not have better success. In the examination of the case there was cited the original canonical decree which created the curacy in 1744, upon the suggestion of the Vice Regal Patron, and in accordance with canonical regulations and the laws of the Indies. Likewise, there were presented the certifi.cates of ,appointment of the chaplains who served in the curacy from the year of its erection to 1808, year after which, as the Provincial Vicar himself admits, the curacy has been filled by the Vice Regal Patron with secular priests, after due certification as a result of competitive examination. Against the canoriical order just refe~rcd to which establishes an i.ndisputable title, and aga:imst the allegation of continuous, peaceful, m~9qui.vocal and manifest possession for a pe:ciod of one hundred and twenty-two years, the Provincial Vicar alleged that his Order claimed the curacy a few ciays after its creation, presenting in this connection two documents, which were answered by the Provincial of San Juan de Dios which owned the hacienda where.San Rafael was located. During the long period of one hundred twentyfour years, the Order did not take the trouble to secure a definite settlen,ent of its claim, perhaps -495, because in the·ibeginn"ing the curacy only had about eighty ~oor Indians, cow-herders and laborers, whereas now it.· has more than t_hirteen thousand souls • . He further alleged that inasmuch as the religious by the Real Cedula of July 8, 1826, had been restored to the curacies and doctrinas under the same conditions in whi'ch they were p:cior to the promulgation of the Real Cedula of December 11, 1776) which secularized these curacies, they had the right to the curacy of San Rafael, in view of the fact that this is located in a territory ~hich had been granted to them. It should be noted, however, that this curacy could not have been secularized, inasmuch as it had always been secule.r since its foundation, and that the Royal Orders in question are not applicable to it (unless they be considered as having retroactive "effect), for the reason that it was created thirty years before the pr~mu~gation of the Order of 1776. With the presentation of a long and hazy brief by the Council of Administration in which these arguments and others of the weakest character were set forth, but which the Vice Regal Patron enr:lorsed, the case was practically terminated For, al though the undersigned ask~d the Vice Regal Patron to lay the ·matter for decision before the Superior Government, together with the opinion of two attorneys which was officially placed on record, he failed to secure this point, an~, out of respect to the highest authority of the Islands, whose prest~g e he has, always tried to uphold, he refrained from ta.king any furth0r action. This settlement of the matter produced a real scandal among the Filipino priests, and served to make still much bitter their disappointment over such great and repeated losses. f The origin of the opposition which everywhere the native priesthood encounters is the opinion which for some years has existed, that it would be an imprudent policy to allow native priests to take charge of the spiritual administration of certain parishes. However, those who entertain such an idea are absolutely ignorant of the real facts, and allow their imagination to wander freely in the realm of theories. It is certain that if the auesti0n of the ecclesiasiical administration of th~ Philippine Archipelago were now to be ventilated anew, and that it were possi- -496ble to bring here a sufficient number of ministers to attend to the spiritual needs of the populous parishes, there would hardly be one Spaniard of intelligence who would not think acceptable such an arrangement. But the auestion is not theoretical but eminently pra.cticai, and, before offering any solution it is necessary to take into consideration various serious dj_fficulties involved. For example, considering the decline of religious fervor, can we count with a sufficient number of young men willing to abnndon their country in order to minister to the spiritual needs of a people of a far away land, under hygienic conditions known torbe poor? Would the Government agree to pay the expenses necessary for the establishment and maintenance of the colleges, professors, 2.nd students, as well as the transp0rtation and oJ.::.her expenses of so many ind~viduals from the Peninsula to the Philippines? And granting that this scheme were feasible, and leaving aside the actual situation, is there nothing to fear from the policy of keeping the native priests in. a spirit of ever growing hostility? Let any one place himself in their situation, and consider the series of measures which have been mentioned, and he can not fail to note that the enormous losses they have suffered and those which still menace them are sufficient causes to turn, in spite of their timidity, their former fidelity and respect for Spain into open hostility. Formerly they administered the curacies in t}1e provinces of Zc,mbales, Bataan, and Pampanga, of which, they ha.ve been disposessed, and, after resting -in the o,::ilief that, with the ruturn of these curacies, all causes for worry had disappeared, they received rt~w and ruder blows which served to reopen and irritate old sores. It can not now be said that their resentment against the regulars is born of class hatred, to which their resentment has always been classed, as long as they attributed their ill fo:rtune to the amb::_tion and power of the religious corpn:·ati.ons. Now that, in the face of clear evidences, t}iey raalize ·that the authorities are trying to support the unreasonable claims of the regulars, and that, in the opinion of the native priests themselves, the policy has been adopted of reducing them into null:Lty, they are going over the ancient barriers, are turning their eyes to a higher aim, and, what was before but a mere resentment -497against the regulars? now assumes the character of an anti-Spanish scmtiment. No longer do they hesitate to say that if the Anglo-Americans or the Englishmen ever take possession of the Philippine Archipelago, it is certain that they would receive better treatment than what they get from the Spaniards. Thus; Your Excellency, by trying to evade an imaginary danger, we are creating a real one. It is easy to understand that, if the enforcement of the Royal Order of September 10th be insisted upon, there must elapse a period of time as long as that which elapsed from the year 1826 to the present for the deliv8ry of the curacies to th·:; regulars in accordance with thu Real Cedula above referred to. It is also evident that, with the renewal of the resentment of the native priests every time they were dispo~sessed of a curacy, (as can be seen today from the effects produced by the loss of the curacy of Rosario of the province of Batangas, and of the curacy of Cavite, which are being turned over to the Recollects in return for the parish of Dapitan and the mission of Lubuagan, which the latter delivered to the Jesuits last July), their hearts are filled with bitterness and, far from being soothed, they become exasperated, seeing that they are abandoned to their fate while the influence of their opponents extends to all directions. It is, therefore, necessary to provide at once a remedy for their discontent and exasperation, for, if the unrest which the undersigned noticed upon his return from the Vatican Council should continue, the resentment of the filipino priest would extend also to their parents, relatives, and the whole Filipino people, with whom they a.ce in closer cont;act than are the regulars, with the result that the danger would assume a grave character, Your Excellency will readily see the e::pedic=rncy aud the necessity of putting out this spnrk of fire which, by eventuality, may grow into a vast conflagration. Such a result may perhaps, serve the purposes of those interested in spreading vain fe~rs. l say vain, for up to the presont in spite of 't,he minute investie;ations made to find justificat:Lon for the cha1'.'ges brought lately against the secular clergy, no positive proof has been found. In view of the foregoing considerations, the undersigned believes: that the Roya]. Order of September 10, together with its provisions affecting the -498Archbishopric of Manila, be repealed, and that things be restored at once to their former status; that the missions and curacies in Mindanao that the Recollect Fa'chers surrendered to the Fathers of that Society of Jesus be compensated with curacies in the Diocese of Cebu and of Jara, which was segregated in 1867, and that the number to be assigned to each Diocese be prorated according to the number of curacies served by native priests, so that the nGed of priests, which is felt in both, be supplied; and, lastly, that the former quostion, raised by the Provincial Vicar (now Procurator in that Court) of the calced Agustin:i.ans, regarding the ownership of the parish of San Rafael in the province of Bulacan, be referred to the ministry of Ultramar, and decided, after due examination, in accordance with justice, and not, as is the opinion of the Secular Clergy, with miscarriage of justice. The undersigned humbly requests your Excellency to decide this question in the manner thus indicated., in _the belief that, in this way, not only would the unrest be calmed, but that, also reenforced by thG gratitude and the well-known fidelity of the Filipino secular priests, the bonds which unite this fertile Archipelago to our beloved Spain would be tightened more and more. May the Lord prolong th~J life of Your Excellency and bestow upon you gr8ce and wisdom for the good of the Catholic Religion and of our beloved country. GREGORIO, ARCHBISHOP OF MANILA 8 Manila, December 31, 1870, TO THE REGENT OF THE KINGDOM.9 8 - His full name was Gregorio Meliton Martinez Y· Santa Cruz. He took charge of the archbishopric of Manila on May 27, 1862. _ 9 - The Regent of Spain then was Marshal Serrano. -4992. The Cavite Affair of 1872 Upon the inauguration of Amadeo as constitutional monarch in January, 1$71, a new ministry was organized which included well known leaders of the Revolution of 1868. Constituting the now ministry werei Serrano, President; Martos, State; Ulloa, Ju1::t~co; Sa 1;asta, Inter::or; Berenguer, Navy; Monet, Finance; Zorrilla, Developrr;ent; Lopez de Ayala, Colonies. It was this ministry th2t appointed Rafael de Izquierdo to succeed Governor de la Torre. The Spanish view on the £avite Affair is set forth by Montero y Vidal as follows: With the establishment in Spain of a government les-s radical than the one that appDintecl La Torre, the latter was reliev,ed from his post. His succesclor, D. Rafael de Izquierdo, assumed control of the government of these islands April 4, 1871. _ The most eventful episode in his rule was the Cavite revolt of 1872. l - Q2.~ cit_., On the account by Montero y Vj_da.l of the Gavit e revolt of 1872, Dr. Pardo de Tavera comments as fol-lows: (Bib1ioteca Filipina) In narrating the events of Cavite, Montero y Vidal does not speak as a historian; he sp83ks as a Spaniard who is bent on denaturalizing the facts at pleasure; he is extremely partial. On the same account, Le Roy makes the_ following observations s 11 Bibl iographical Notos 11 , B. &:. R., vol. 52, pp. 170-171, 'rhe usually sober and colorless Montero y Vidal becomes very rabid in his recital of the Cavite episode j_n the Philippine history 8nd is very positive, not only in denouncing the priests who were executed and the d0portees as guilty, but in proclaiming their ·movement ~s actually separatist in character. He ridicules at lbngth the account of the Frenchman Plauchut in the Revuo des deux mondes for 1877 but Plauchut, as well as Montero y 7iclal himself, was resident in or near Manila at the timo of the occurrences. -500- The abolition of the privileges enjoyed by the laborers of the Cavite arsenal of exemption from the tribute was, according to some, the cause of the insurrection. There were, however, other causes. 'rhe Spanish revolution which overthrew a secular throne; the propaganda carried on by an unbridled press against monarchical principles, attentatory of the most sacred respects towards the dethroned majesty; the democratic and republj_can books and pamphlets; the speeches and preachings of the apostles of these new ideas in Spain; tbe outbursts of the American publicists and the criminal policy of the senseless Governor whom the Revolutionary government sent t6 govern the Philippines, and who put into practice these ideas were the determining circumstances which gave rise, among certain Filipinos, to the idea of attaining their independence. It was towards this goa]. that they started to work, with the powerful assistance of a certain section of the native clergy, who out of spite toward the friars, made common cause with the enemies of the mother country. At various times but specially in the beginning of the year 1e72 1 the authorities received anonymous communications with the information that a great uprising would break out against the Spaniards 1 the minute the fleet at Cavite left for the South, and that all would be assassinated, including the frtars. But nobody g3.ve importance to these notices. The consp-iracy had been going on since tl"ie days of La Torr-e with utmost secrecy. At times, the principal leaders met eithor in the house of the Filipino Spaniard D. Joaquin Pardo de Tavera, or in that of the native priest, Jacinto Zamora, and these meetings were usually attended by the curate of Bacoor ( Gavit e), tho soul of the movement J whose energetic character and immense wealth fJnabJ.ed him to exercise a strong influence, The garrison of M:enila, composed mostly of native soldiers, were involved in this conspirncy, as well as a muJ.titude of cj.vilia.ns. The plan was for the soldiers to assassinate their officers, the servcmts their maste::."'s, and the escort of the Captain General at Malacafia.ng, to dispose of the governor himself. The friars and other Spaniards were later -501to have their turn. The preconcerted signal among the conspirators of Cavite and Manila was the firing of rockets from the walls of the city. The details having been arranged, it was agreed that the uprising was to break out in the evening of the 20th of January, 1g72. Various circumstances, however, which might well be considered as providential, upset the plans, and made the conspiracy a signal _failure. In the district of Sampaloc the fiesta of the patron saint, the Virgin of Loreto, was being celo.brated with pomp and splendor. On the night of the 20th, fireworks were displayed and rockets fired into the air. Those in Cavite mistook these for the signal to revolt, and at nine-thirty in t1.1e evening of that day two hundred native soldiers under the leade'.t'ship of Sergeant La Madrid rose up in arms, assassinated the con~ander of the fort and wounded his wife. The military governor of Cavite, D. Fernando Rojas, despatched two Spaniards to inform tho Manj,la authorities of the upriiing but they were met on the way by a group of natives, belonging to the Guias established by La Torre, who put them instantly to death. At about the same ti~e, an employee of the arsenal, D. Domingo Mijares, left Cavite ln a war vessel for Manila, arriving there at midnight, He in.formed the commandant of Jviarine. of what hnd occurred, and this offir:::ial immediately relayed the news to Governor Izquierdo. Early the next morning two regiments, under the command of D. Felipe Ginoves, segundo cabo, left for Cavite on board the merchant ve,ssels FiJ.j_pirw, Mmdla, Isabala I and Isabella II. Ginoves demanded rendition and waited the wl~le day of the 21st for tho rebels to surrender, without ordering the assauJ.t of their position in order to avoid unnecessary shedding of blood. After waiting a whole day in vain for the rendition of the rebels, Ginoves launched an assault against the latter's position, early in the morning of the 22nd, putting to the sword the majority of the rebels and making prisoners of the rest. On the same day an official proclamation announced the suppression of the revolt. -502As a result of the declarations made by some of the prisoners in which several individuals were pointed out as instigators, Don Jose Burgos and D. Jacinto Zamora, curates of the Cathedral, D. Feliciano Gomez, curate of Bacoor (Cnvits), several other Filipino priests~ D. Antonio Maria Regidor, lawyer and Regidor of the Ayuntamiento, D. Joaquin Pardo de Tavera, Consejero de Adninistraci6n, Pedro Carillo, Gervasio Sanchez and Jo13e Mauricio de Leon, lawyer Enrique Paraiso and Jose·and Pio Basa, employees, and Crisanto Reyes, Maximo Paterno and several other Filipinos, were arrested. The council of war, which from the beginning took charge of the causes in connection with th0, Cavite uprising, passed the sentence of death on forty one of the rebels. On the 27th of January the Capta.in-General affixed his - 11 cumplase 11 on the. sentence. On the 6th of the following ~onth, eleven more were sentenced to death, but the Governor General, by decree of the day following, commuted this sentence to life imprisonment. On the 8th, the sentence of death was pronounced on Camerino and ten years imprisonment on eleven indivicluc:1s of the famous 11 :Juias de la Torre," for the as:::;assination of tho Spaid.ards who, on the night of Janu3.ry 20th, were sent to Manila to carry news of the uprising. The same council of the 15th of February, sentenced to dj_e by strdngulation the Filipino priests, 2 2 - Antonio Regidor makes the following declaration on the trial of P. Burgos:- (Quoted by Artigc1s, J_:..os .Sucesos d.§. 1872, pp. 134-135l The counsellors for the defense read their concise briefs, but the lawyer for P, 3Ll::.~gos (Jose Arrieta) limited himself to reques:.ing p-'J.r·doi-; for hi2, client, intimating that it was :.rrroossible to :::ave him by some other way, inasmuch as B:rrgos "\f.;as by cc1n.f eSS ion guilty• Burgos was surp1°is9d on he,_~rin.g lds :Lawyer declare in such manner, and unabJ.e to reDtr·a:in rd.rn.self, he stood up faeing the council of war, and said: 11 I have not confessed any guilt and I am not guilty; that is not my defense; that ge11tleman has changod. it. I deny all the charges agairist me. They l@ve-no foundation in fact or in law." -503D. Jose Burgos, D. Jacinto Zamora and D. Mariano Gomez, and Francisco Saldua; and Maximo Inocencio, Enrique Paraiso and Crisanto de los Roycs to ten yAars imprisonment. Early in the morning of the seventeenth of Fi~bruary, an imrrense muJ.ti.tudu appeared on the field of Bagumbayan to witness the execution of the s8ntence. The attending force was composed of Filipino troops, and the batteries of the fort were aimed at the place of execution, ready to fire upon the least sign of uprising. Gomez was executGd first, then Zamora, then Burgos, and lastly, Saldua. On the 3rd of April, 1672, the Audiencia suspended from the practice of law the followine rren: p. Jose Basa y Enriquez, D. Joaq~in Prardo de Tavera, D. Antonio Regidor, D. Pedro Carillo, D. Gervasio Sanchez and D. Jose Mauricio de Leon.3 IzquiGrdo had requested the sending to Manila of Spanish troops for the defense of the fort as most of thoso found here wero natives. In nursuance of Izquierdo 1 s re.quest, tho government, by decree of April 4, 1872, dissolved.the native regi~ ment of artillery and ordered tho creation of an artillery force to be composed exclusively of Peninsulars. The latter arrived in Manila in July, 1872. On the occasion of the arrival of the troops, the Sto. Domingo Church celebrated a special mass at which high officials of the Government, the religious corporations, and the general pub.1ic, attended, upon invitation by the Governor and Captain General of the Philippines. ------~3 - These and severr1l othr:n·s were sentenced by a Council of War to imprisonment at th0 Marianas Islands •. Some of them, like Regidor and Pardo de Tavera, succeeded in escaping from these islands on board an American boat, which brought them to Hon2;kong. -504b. The Filipino View of the Cavite Affair 4 A petition submitted by a group of Filipinos in 1ggg dealt with the Cavite af~air. It ropresonts the Filipino viewpoint on the character and background of that incident, The famous ouestion of tho secularization of the curacies avor 'wh1ch there had been a groat doal of controversy between ths Filipino and tho regular clergy was raging. The Filipino priests led by Dr. Jose Burgos sustained the respectability of the Council of Trent which had ruled that the friars were absolutely forbidden to hold curacies, ar:d, at the same time, declared extinguished tlie privil,2ges conceded by Pius V and other P~pes in favor of the regulars to hold curacies while there was lack of secular priests. The great nurr:b er of s ecu.lnrs in the country, with the cfrcumstance that tte onenin~ of the Suez Canal made it easy for secular p~iest; in the Peninsula to come to the PhiJ.ippincs, constituted a convincing argument against the privilege of the regulars. The friars waged a vigorous campaign of opposition against this prcte::ision; they accusod the native priests of incapacity for the duties of the ministry, and referred to them as intellectual pigmies, whose origin could be traced to the monkey. As if these were not suffici_ent to preserve their privilege, they pop:.iJ.arized the idea that the friar was a necessity in the Philippines, not so much for the needs of the Catholic faith, nor for the preaching of the Gospel, as for the maintenance of the national integrity. Just then the Cavite incident occurred. A few soldiers mutinied in that f'.)rt; anc. on the arriVEl.l of the g ew:iral second in comrnc::nd, who cc:me on a merchant ship, the rebellion was sJffocated. The church bells of Sto. Domingo, S. Agustin, and others 4 - Appendix IX in M. H. del Pilar, I-,a....~rania NJonacal. -505rang in delirium over the success of the Spanish arms, and later three secular priests ascended the scaffold, whilG other priests, merchants, and lawyers went to exile, These were tried by a military court; the judicial authority did not intervene, not even to raise the question of jurisdiction. These circumstances sr,ow tliat the inciden,c was s:::.mply one of military insubordination and did not conie up to tlH) category of a political crime, c. The Cavito Affair Accordin8 to Dr. Tavera.5 The arrival of General Izquierdo (1$71-1873) was tho signal for a complete cnange in the aspect of affairs. The new governor soon made clear that his views were different from those of La Torre -that there would be no change in tte established form of government---2nd he at·. once· announcc:;d · thet he intended to govern the people witr, Tia cruc:Lfix in on-3 hand, a.nd a sword in the other.n Eis firct official act was to prohibit the founding of a schooJ. of arts and trades, which was being organized by the efforts and funds raised by natives of standing in the community, but the foundinr,: of v(bic:i1 did not tally with the views of the religious orders. Governor Izquierdo believed that the establis~ncnt of the new school was merely n pretext for the or 0;anization of' a political cJ.ub, and he not only did not allow it to be opened but made a public statement accusing the Filipinos who had charge of the movement. All of thosu who had offered tLeir suoport to e:::-~-Govcrnor La 'l'orre were cle.ss ed as personas sospechosas \I ,:mspects ) , a term that since that time has been used in the Philippin Islands to desi~nate any p3rson who refused to servilely obey the wishes and whims of the authorities. The conservative elemont in the islands now directed th0 government policy, and the educated Filipinos fell more and more under the displeasure and suspicion of the governor. ~ 5 - "Historical Account of the