Friday, May 22, 2009

The Pre-Colonial Period

THE PRE COLONIAL PHILLIPNES


GOVERNMENT

  • BARANGGAY- FILIPONOS EARLIEST FORM OF GOVERNMENT
  • EACH BARANGAY IS RULED BY CHIEFTAINS (DATU)
  • CHIEFTAINS (DATU) –RULE AND GOVERN HIS SUBJECTS AND TO PROMOTE THEIR WELL BEING. IN TIMES OF PEACE, HE WAS THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE, LEGISLATOR, AND THE JUDGE.
  • LAWS WERE MADE BY CHIEFTAINS AND THE ELDERS

RELIGION

  • BELIEVE IN ANITOS, PRIMORDIAL FORCES OF NATURE THAT COULD ACOMMPANY OR POSSESS PEOPLE
  • THEY BELIEVE ILLNESS IS CAUSE BY EVIL SPIRITS
  • BATHALA- THE MOST POWERFULL GOD
  • PRAISE MANY GODS& GODDESSES

ECONOMY

  • Not much different from that found today in many remote barrios.
  • During those halves- forgotten days, life was placid and characterized by less economic and social pressure than it is today..
  • Agriculture – the main source of livelihood. There was an abundance of rice, coconuts, sugar cane, etc.
  • Land cultivation
  • Productivity was increased by the use of irrigation ditches, as evidenced by the world- famous Ifugao rice terraces of mountain province.
  • There was a system of landholding which was public and private.
  • Mining was comparatively developed
  • lumbering and shipbuilding were flourishing industries in those pre- colonial days
  • weaving was a home industry
  • There were probably more commerce and business transactions along the waterways than along pathways.
  • There was foreign trade, too, with china, Japan, Siam, Cambodia, Borneo, Sumatra, Java and other islands of the old Malaysia.

ARTS


  • The first glimpse of the artistic sense of the primitive inhabitants of the Philippines can be had in the remains of their tools and weapons
  • With the advance of the New Stone age the primitive inhabitants began to show signs of artistic improvement in the form of beads, amulets, bracelets and earings
  • In the early Iron Age, the artistic variety of the ancient Filipinos reached its apogee. Ornaments with different forms and sizes began to appear.
  • There were several influences on Filipino primitive art which are apparent in the surviving artifacts.
TECHNOLOGIES AND INFRASTRUCTURE

Negritos


  • Homes- temporary sheds made of jungle leaves and branches of trees
  • Made fire by rubbing two dry sticks together to give them warmth
  • Didn’t know how to cook food
  • Used bow and arrow as weapon and for hunting.

Indones


  • More advanced
  • Lived in grass-covered homes built above the ground or on top of trees.
  • Practiced dry agriculture
  • Clothing was made from beaten bark and decorated designs
  • Cooked food in bamboo tubes

Implements: polished stone axes, adzes and chisels

Weapons: Bow and arrows, spears, shield and blow guns (sumpit).

Malays


  • Culturally more advanced that Negritos and Indones
  • possessed the Iron Age culture
  • introduced into the Philippines both lowland and highland methods of rice cultivation, including the system of irrigation
  • domestication of animals (dogs, fowls, and carabaos)
  • manufacture of metal tools and weapons; pottery and weaving

Weapons: bows and arrows, spears, bolos, daggers, krises (swords), sumpits (blowguns), shields and armors made of animal hide and hardwood, and lantakas (bronze cannons).




SOCIAL CLASSES


Divided into three social classes. Nobles, Freemen and the dependents.

Nobles:


  • consist of chiefs and their families
  • Wielded tremendous influence in the baranggay
  • Enjoyed rights that were not usually enjoyed by the other members of the society.
  • In tagalong region, usually carried the title of Gat or Lakan. Lakan Dula Gat Maitan

Freemen:

  • Called Mahadlika by the tagalogs.
  • Composed of free men and dependents who earned their freedom.

Dependents:


  • Occupying the lowest stratum
  • Known as alipin among the Tagalogs.
  • Acquired his status in society by inheritance, by captivity in war, failing to pay his debts by purchase or by committing a crime.
  • Among the tagalogs, alipin may be namamahay or sagigilid.
  • The namamahay had his own family and properties an served his master during planting and harvest seasons.
  • The sagigild lived with his master, had no property of his own and could not marry without the latters consent.
SYSTEM OF WRITING

  • Considered tagalog as the richest among the other languages
  • Filipinos before the arrival of Spaniards had a syllabary which was probably of Sanskrit or Arabic provenance.
  • Syllabary consisted of seventeen symbols. Three were vowels and fourteen were consonants.





  • They wrote on bark of trees, on leaves, bamboo tubes using their knives and daggers, pointed sticks as their pens and their colored saps as ink.

SOURCES:

Agoncillo, Teodoro A.. History of the Filipino People. Philippines: Garotech

Publishing, 1990.


Funtecha, Henry F.. “The pre-colonial government of the Filipino.” <http://www.thenewstoday.info/2006/07/28/the.pre.colonial.government.of.the.filipinos.html>


Notes on Philippine pre-colonial literature.”

<http://intometropolis.blogspot.com/2007/12/notes-on-philippine-pre-colonial.html.> May. 19, 2009


Reyes, Joel M. and Rodolfo Sosonto Perez III. “Pre Colonial Period.”


http://www.fact-archive.com/encyclopedia/upload/f/f0/Baybayin_alpha.jpg



The Spanish Period






“PHILIPPINES UNDER IMPERIAL SPAIN”

GOVERNMENT




This fascinating political cartoon comes from El Debate, Spanish language news daily during the Spanish colonial period in the Philippines.
· Centralized form of government.
· Divided into two units: Central government and Local government.

Central government:

· The King entrusted the colony to the governor-general, who had the highest position in the government.
· The Royal Audiencia was the Supreme Court of the Philippines.
· The Residencia and the Visitador were the special courts that investigated on the conduct of the governor-general and other high-ranking Spanish officials.
Local Government (provinces, cities, towns and barrios)
· The provinces were divided into two:
1. Alcaldia which recognized Spain's possession over the land
2. corregimiento where the people had not succumbed to its ruling power.
· Ayuntamiento or the city government was the center of the society, religion, culture and business.
· The pueblo was governed by the gobernadorcillo, the highest position for Filipino politicians.
· The Cabeza de Barangay governed the barrios.

FrailocraciaDuring the Spanish regime, there was union of church and state.
· The governor-general had power over the church.
· The friars, on the other hand, played a very important role in the government.
· The Archbishop was only the most powerful in the church. However, it seemed that the church exercised more power than the government and because of this; the government in the Philippines was called "Frailocracia," a government controlled by the friars.


RELIGION
Christianity's Introduction:
· Spanish colonizers succeeded in introducing Christianity to the islands.
· Christianity represents over 85% of religious beliefs. They were highly successful in the region of modern day Luzon and Visayas but were unsuccessful in Mindanao, south region, where Moslems staved off the Spanish efforts.
· It was a forced the induction of Christianity -- leading to thousands of deaths and tortures of the residents of the islands.



'Christianization' Strategies Employed by the Spanish:



Early Spanish Chapel, Luzon

Most lowland Filipinos were converted to Roman Catholicism.
There are a number of reasons why Spanish missionaries were successful in this attempt:
1. Mass baptism - the initial practice of baptizing large numbers of Filipinos at one time enabled the initial conversion to Christianity.. It is said that many Filipinos associated baptism with their own indigenous 'healing rituals', which also rely on the symbolism of holy water--very typical of Southeast Asian societies.
2. Reduccion policies - in areas where Filipinos lived scattered across the landscape in small hamlets, the Spanish military employed a resettlement policy that they had used successful. This policy was called reduccion, and essentially meant a forced relocation of small, scattered settlements into one larger town.
· The policy was designed for the convenience of administration of the Spanish colony's population, a way for a small number of armed Spanish constabulary to control more easily the movements and actions of a large number of Filipinos.
· It was also designed to enable Spain to collect taxes from their Christianized converts. Throughout Spanish rule, Christianized Filipinos were forced to pay larger taxes than indios, or native, unchristian zed peoples.
· The policy also made it easier for a single Spanish Catholic friar to 'train' Filipinos in the basic principles of Christianity.
The policy was successful in some areas but impossible to enforce. Spanish archives are full of exasperated colonial officials complaining about how such settlements were 'all but abandoned' in many cases after only a few weeks.
3. Attitude of the Spanish clergy in the early phase - Spanish friars was forced to learn the native language of the peoples they sought to convert. Without schools that trained people in Spanish, the Spanish friars had no choice but to say Christian mass and otherwise communicate in the vernacular languages of the Philippines.
In the late Spanish period, in contrast, Spanish priests enraged many Filipinos for failing to
a) Allow otherwise 'trained' Filipino priests to ascend into the higher echelons of the Catholic Church hierarchy in the Philippines;
b) Return much of the land they had claimed as 'friar estates' to the Philippine landless farmers;
c) Recognizing nascent and emerging Filipino demands for more autonomy and a greater say in how the colony was to be managed.
4. Adaptation of Christianity to the local context –
· Filipinos were mostly animistic in their religious beliefs and practices prior to Spanish intervention.
· In most areas they revered the departed spirits of their ancestors through ritual offerings, and also believed in a variety of nature spirits. Such beliefs were central to healing practices, harvest rites, and to maintaining a cosmological balance between this world and the afterlife. Spirits were invisible, but also responsible for both good and bad events. Spirits could be blamed for poor harvests, illness, and bad luck generally. Yet Filipinos believed that proper ritual feasting of the spirits would appease them, and result in good harvests, healthy recovery of the ill, and the fertility of women.
— The legacy of Spanish conquest and colonial rule in the Philippines, as is true of all colonial attempts to 'master' or manage indigenous populations, is mixed.
— On the one hand, Spanish clergy were very destructive of local religious practices. They systematically destroyed indigenous holy places and 'idols', or statues and representations of indigenous spirits, gods or goddesses.
— They also tried to stamp out all examples of native scripts and literature for fear that Filipinos were using exotic symbols to foment rebellion.
— The Spanish also imposed new 'moralities' on Filipinos by discouraging slave holding, polygamy, gambling, and alcohol consumption that were a natural part of the indigenous social and religious practices.
— Hispanic rule left a legacy of syncretism, rather than totally destructive, elements.
— Spanish clergy introduced some very European features of Catholic practice that blended well with indigenous ritual practices.
— Spanish Catholic priests relied on vivid, theatrical presentations of stories of the Bible in order to help Filipinos understand the central messages of Christianity.
— This colonial legacy lives on whenever Filipino Catholics re-enact through religious dramas the passion of Christ, or Christ's martyrdom, during Holy Week.


The beginning of a Pasyon play,Manila

Christ and two disciples in the Garden of Gethsemene

The Devil tempts Christ









Christ is led away by Roman soldiers

The Crucifixion of Christ and Two Thieves



· Other Filipino ceremonies also mark the Christian calendar, such as during the rituals surrounding death.
· Death is always an occasion that marks a society's traditions, and in the Philippines funerals are usually accompanied by somber village processions and music, essential parts of Roman Catholic ritual practice.
· Filipino indigenous religious beliefs traditionally celebrated rice planting and harvesting times, the death anniversaries of departed ancestors, and these have been blended in meaning and timing with Catholic rites such as All Saints Day and Fiesta de Mayo.
· In this kind of religious syncretism, blending the rites and meaning of two totally separate societies, the outcome is often a surprise rather than a foregone conclusion.

ECONOMY
Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade








Ang mga kalakal na dinadala dito ng mga Sangley ay lubhang kailangan ng mga taga-Manila upang mabuhay nang matiwasay, pati na ng lahat ng naparito upang kumita ng salapi, hindi lamang ngayon kundi sa mga darating na panahon. Subalit itong taon na ito, sobra-sobra ang abuso at pagdayang ginawa sa mga Sangley. Baka hindi na bumalik dito, o baka mahalan nang napaka-taas ang kanilang mga paninda

· The Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade was the main source of income for the colony during its early years. Service was inaugurated in 1565 and continued into the early 19th century.
· The Galleon trade brought silver from New Spain and silk from China by way of Manila. This way, the Philippines earned its income through buy and sell - that is, they bought silk from China for resale to New Spain and then bought American silver for resale to China.
· The trade was very prosperous. But It neglected the development of the colony's local industries which affected the Indios since agriculture was their main source of income. In addition, the building and operation of galleons put too much burden on the colonists' annual polo y servicio, resulted in cultural and commercial exchanges between Asia and the Americas that led to the introduction of new crops and animals to the Philippines notably tobacco that gave the colony its first real income which benefit extended to the common Indio.
· The trade lasted for over two hundred years, and ceased in 1821 with the secession of American colonies from Spain.
Royal Society of Friends of the Country
· Jose de Basco y Vargas, formally established the Real Sociedad Economica de Amigos del Pais composed of leading men in business, industry and profession.
· The society was tasked to explore and exploit the island's natural bounties.
ü The society led to the creation of Plan General Economico of Basco which implemented the monopolies on the areca nut, tobacco, spirited liquors and explosives.
ü It offered local and foreign scholarships and training grants in agriculture and established an academy of design.
ü It was also credited to the carabao ban of 1782, the formation of the silversmiths and gold beaters guild and the construction of the first papermill in the Philippines in 1825.
ü It was introduced on 1780, vanished temporarily on 1787-1819, 1820-1822 and 1875-1822 and ceased to exist in the middle of the 1890s.
Royal Company of the Philippines
· March 10, 1785, Charles III created the Royal Philippine Company with a 25 year charter.
· It was granted exclusive monopoly of bringing to Manila, Philippines; Chinese and Indian goods and shipping them directly to Spain via the Cape of Good Hope.
· It was stiffly objected by the Dutch and English who saw it as a direct attack on their trade of Asian goods.
· It was also vehemently opposed by the traders of the Galleon trade who saw it as competition. This gradually resulted into the death of both institutions: The Royal Philippine Company in 1814 and the Galleon trade in 1815.
Taxation







· To support the colony, several forms of taxes and monopolies were imposed.
ü The buwis (tribute), which could be paid in cash or kind (tobacco, chickens, produce, gold, blankets, cotton, rice, etc., depending on the region of the country), was initially was fixed at 8 reales (one real being 12.5 centavos) and later increased to 15 reales, apportioned as follows: ten reales buwis, one real diezmos prediales (tithes), one real to the town community chest, one real sanctorum tax, and three reales for church support
ü Also collected were the bandalâ (from the Tagalog word mandalâ, a round stack of rice stalks to be threshed), an annual enforced sale and requisitioning of goods such as rice.
ü Custom duties and income tax were also collected. By 1884, the tribute was replaced by the Cedula personal, wherein colonists were required to pay for personal identification. Everyone over the age of 18 was obliged to pay.
Forced Labor (Polo y servicio)








The system of forced labor otherwise known as polo y servicio evolved within the framework of the encomienda system, introduced into the South American colonies by the Conquistadores and Catholic priests who accompanied them.
· Polo y servicio is the forced labor for 40 days of men ranging from 16 to 60 years of age who were obligated to give personal services to community projects. One could be exempted from polo by paying the falla (corruption of the Spanish Falta, meaning "absence"), a daily fine of one and a half real.
· In 1884, labor was reduced to 15 days. The polo system was patterned after the Mexican repartimento, selection for forced labor
Cultural Transformation

ARTS and CULTURE


· Baybayin (syllabic writing)‏
Mid-18th century
Earliest Books Published at the Parian of Manila (1593)‏
Doctrina Christiana, en lengua española, y tagala
Fr. Juan Cobo’s Wu-chu T’ien-chu cheng-chiao chen-ch’uan shih-lu (A Discussion of the Real Traditional Propagation of the True Religion)‏
Doctrina Christiana en letra y lengua china
Ordinationes generals­- earliest known de visu work by means of movable types (Juan de Vera, 1604)‏
Mid-16th century
”Filibustero”- an uneducated Filipino who knew Spanish
17th century
Earliest known Filipino writers
Unknown Tagalog poet (1605)- May bagyo ma’t may rilim
Fernando Bagongbanta- Salamat nang ualang hanga
Tomas Tinpin (1610)- Auit
Pedro Suarez Ossorio (1627)- Salamat nang ualang hoyang
18th century: Ranked the Most Famous Ones
Gaspar Aquino de Belen
Felipe de Jesus
Jose dela Cruz (Huseng Sisiw)‏
Theocentric Literature
Awit (dodecasyllabic quatrain)‏
Corrido (octosyllabic quatrain)‏
Metrical romances ( written by Ananias Zorilla, Jose dela Cruz, Francisco Baltazar)‏
Anti-Muslim melodrama “Moro-Wars”- moro-moro or komedya
European- “comedias de capa y espada”
Spanish- “obra caballerescas
Lenten season- pasyon
Zarzuela- latest dramatic form (1870)

Visual Arts
Imagenes
Santoses
Jewelry

Folk Arts (whittled bamboo arch decorations) ‏
Kaluskos
Palaspas
Moriones
Rosaries
Combs
Parols
Pastillas wrappers
Colorful art Presentation in foods
Pan de San Nicolas
Atsara
Sapin-sapin
Painting
Faustino Quiotang (1820)- Sedes Sapientiae and San Jose with child Jesus
Damian Domingo, an insular, director of the Academia de Dibujo (1827-1833)‏
Juan Arceo
Juan Transfiguracion Nepomuceno and families
Severino Flavier Pablo
Hilarion Soriano
Jose Honorato Lozano – “Pepe Vigia” or “Bahia” and “Letras y Figuras”
Lorenzo Guerrero- “Academia de Dibujo y Pintura”
Simon Flores
Regino Garcia y Baza
Juan Luna
Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo
19th century
Esteban Villanueva- 14 tableaux of the Ambaristo or basi revolt of 1807
Laguna- Jose Dans who executed Final Judgment and Heaven, Earth , Hell
Tayabas- Vicente Villaseñor of Lucban
Cavite- Roman Faustino’s Ensueño (1892)‏
Printmaking, Engraving and Typography
Nicolas dela Cruz Bagay
Cipriano Romualdo Bagay
Francisco Suarez
Laureano Atlas
Felipe Sevilla
Candido Lopez
Juan delos Santos –sculpted the baroque altar of the San Agustin church
Paete woodcarvers
Mariano Madriñan
Aurelio Buhay
Isabelo Tampingco
Sotero Garcia
Romualdo T. de Jesus
Ciriaco Gaudinez
Felix Pardo de Tavera
Ciriaco Arevalo
School of Music in Lumbang (Laguna) taught:
Fandango
Seguidilla
Jota
Composers
Marcelo Adonay
Simplicio Solis
Julian Felipe
Julio Nakpil
Dolores Paterno
Social Transformation

Adoption of Hispanic Names
Decreed by Gov. Narciso Claveria in 1849
Based on compiled names of saints, indigenous and Chinese patronymics, flora and fauna, geographical names, and the arts
Filipinos were obligated to adopt surnames like Rizal, Del Pilar or Luna althugh some ndigenous surnames like Mabini, Malantic, Dandan and Paganiban, were retained
Catagalogo alfabetico de apellidos contained some derogatory names like “Utut”, “Ung-goy”, and even “Casillas”
Houses
bahay na bato with a wide azotea (batalan in original), retaining the banguerahan and providing an aljibe or a well for water – supply
Foreign Cuisines
Spanish indigenized dishes like adobo, menudo, sarciado, puchero or mechado and the Chinise – derived noodle preparations Filipinized into pancit malabon and pancit luglog
Change in Dressing
kanggan and bahag to barong tagalog or camisa chino
putong to hats
Shoes and slippers as part of men’s fashion
Baro and saya for women developed into mestiza dress
Jewelry and ornaments, gold and tortoise peineta, earrings of different sizes and shapes
Spanish Loan Words
dasal from rezar
Dalandan from naraja
Sinigwelas from ciruela
• Conversely, the Filipino also contributed to enrich the Spanish language
Camarin from camalig
Carinderia from karihan
Molave from mulawin
Compadrazgo (ritual co – parenthood) came with baptism and marriages
Magellan served as Humabon’s padrino, and Legazpi stood as Rajah Tupa’s godfather
Intermarriages which resulted in mixed blood or mestizos (1883)‏
La Funeraria, the first Philippine funeral parlor was established by Carlos March in Manila which advertised European – made coffins, embalming, “French – style packing,” tombstones, and guaranteed “permanent service”
Conversion of the Filipinos
fiestas honoring the saints
Fiestas during Holy Week, on Corpus Christi, and the feast day of the patron saint
Pomp and pageantry of the religious processions
Exotic Hispanic dances and music
Religious dramas of the sinakulo and the komedya or moro – moro
Cofadias and sodalities of the Filipino laymen and laywomen honoring the Virgin Mary



TECHNOLOGIES AND INFRASTRUCTURE

· Quiles
· Arana
· Victoria
· Calesa
· Carretela
· Bicycles
· Telephones
· Telegraphs
· Kingke
Infrastructures
· Ferrocarril de Manila-Dagupan



· Compañia de los Tranvias de Filipinas







· Puente Colgante








· Cable linking
· Public lighting system (using coconut oil)
· La Electricista de Manila



SOCIAL STRUCTURE

· Principalia (upper class) nobility class was the social and educated class in the towns of colonial Philippines composed of the Gobernadorcillo (Town Mayor), or the Cabeza de Barangay (Chief of the Barangay) who governed the districts and the awardees of the medal of Civil Merit.
Composed of the Gobernadorcillo (Town Mayor) or the Cabeza de Barangay (Chief of the Barangay) who governed the districts and the awardees of the medal of Civil Merit.
ü Exempted from forced labor during the colonial period
ü Were allowed to vote, be elected to public office and be addressed by the title: Don or Doña
ü Given certain roles in the Church, such as assisting the priest in pastoral and religious activities








Costume of a family belonging to Principalía during the 19th century. Picture taken from the exhibit in Villa Escudero Museum in San Pablo Laguna, Philippines.

· Ilustrados- (Spanish for "erudite," "learned," or "enlightened ones"). constituted the Filipino educated class during the Spanish colonial period in the late 19th century
ü They were the middle class who were educated in Spanish and exposed to Spanish liberal and European nationalist ideals.









A late 19th century photograph of the Ilustrados in Madrid, Spain (ca. 1890)
ü Composed of native-born intellectuals and cut across ethnolinguistic and racial lines



1. Indios, person of pure Austronesian (Malay/Malayo-Polynesian) ancestry (natives)







2. Insulares, Spaniards born in Spain who took important positions in the Spanish government in the Philippines.








3. Mestizos, Filipinos of mixed indigenous Filipino (Austronesian people/Malay/Malayo-Polynesian), or European or Chinese ancestry.











4. Peninsulares, Spaniards who are born in Spain




SYSTEM of WRITING and EDUCATION
· Latin alphabet
Educational System












Spanish priest headed the formal education; the focus of the education is “Christian Doctrines.” Students were not allowed to speak their own language, only the Spanish language.

· Formal educational system.
· The Religious congregations paved the way in establishing schools from the primary level to the tertiary level of education.
· The schools focused on the Christian Doctrines.
· There was a separate school for boys and girls.
· The wealthy Filipinos or the Ilustrados were accommodated in the schools.
· Colonial education brought more non-beneficial effects to the Filipinos.
Educational Decree 1863
1. The first educational system for students in the country was established by virtue of the Education Decree of 1863.
2. The decree required the government to provide school institutions for boys and girls in every town.
3. Spanish schools started accepting Filipino students. It was during this time when the intellectual Filipinos emerged.
4. The Normal School was also established which gave men the opportunity to study a three-year teacher education for the primary level.
5. The friars controlled the educational system during the Spanish times. They owned different schools, ranging from the primary level to the tertiary levels of education.
6. The missionaries took charge in teaching, controlling and maintaining the rules and regulations imposed to the students. These missionaries emphasized the teachings of the Catholic religion starting from the primary level to the tertiary level of education. The students in the primary level were taught the Christian Doctrines, the reading of Spanish books and a little of the natives' language. Science and Mathematics were not very much taught to the students even in the universities. Aside from the Christian Doctrines taught, Latin was also taught to the students instead of Spanish.
7. The schools before were exclusive for the Spaniards. The Filipinos were only able to enter the schoo1 in the late 19th century. The schools also limited their accommodations to the sons of wealthy Filipino families in 1863.Although the schools were already open for Filipinos, the friars still believed that the Filipinos would not be able to match their skills and that the only way for the Filipinos to learn fast was to impose upon them strict discipline which means applying corporal punishment.
Schools Built By the Spaniards
· The schools for boys and girls were separated.
Schools for Boys
· The first established schools were exclusive for the boys.
· The Augustinians built the first school in the Philippines situated in Cebu in 1565.
· College was equivalent to a university during the Spanish regime. The student graduated with the degree in Bachelor of Arts (Bachiller en Artes).
· The first college school for the boys was the "Colegio de San Ignacio" which was established by the Jesuits in Manila in 1589.
· They also established the "Colegio de San Idelfonso" in Cebu in 1595.
· In 1601, "Colegio de San Jose" was established.
· In 1589, the "Escuela Pia" was entrusted by the government to the Jesuits. Later, this was called Ateneo de Municipal which is now the famous Ateneo de Manila University.
· The Dominicans also made a name as they established one of the best universities in the Philippines, the University of Santo Tomas, which was opened in 1611.
· In 1630, the Dominicans established another university, the "San Juan de Letran" for the orphaned boys.
Schools for Girls:
· "Colegio de Santa Potenciana" was the first school and college for girls. This was opened in 1589.
· Following the birth of the first school for women, Colegio de Santa Isabel opened in 1632.
· The religious congregations also established schools for the girls called "beaterio". The so-called "beaterio" was meant for orphaned girls who could not afford to educate themselves. The subjects taught were housekeeping, cooking, sewing and embroidery-making, and others intended for good housekeeping.
Effects of Colonial Education in the Philippines
· The effect of education to the Filipinos was only compelled to the friars' influences from their lessons based on the Christian Doctrines or teachings. Indeed, the friars were effective in evangelizing the Catholic religion to the Filipinos.
· One major failure of the educational system of the religious congregations was the withholding of the Filipinos to learn other bodies of knowledge. Besides limiting education to the teaching of Spanish, Latin, and the Filipino languages, the teaching of Religion was also given emphasis. Thus, the teaching of Mathematics and Science were neglected.
· In entirety, education during the Spanish regime was privileged only to Spanish students. The supposed Philippine education was only a means to remain in the Philippines as colonizers. For this reason, the Filipinos became followers to the Spaniards in their own country. Even auspicious Filipinos became cronies, to the extent that even their life styles were patterned from the Spaniards.
· Several educated Filipinos referred to as ilustrados began movements directed towards change in the system of government in the Philippines. Despite their wealth and education, the ilustrados were still considered by the Spaniards to be inferior. One of the goals of the ilustrado was to be in the same level with the proud Spaniards. The growing number of ilustrados in the Philippines maybe considered one of the major effects of education by the Spaniards in the Philippines.

The American Period

AMERICAN PERIOD


When America signed the Treaty of Paris after the Spanish-American war, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines which was purchased from Spain for a mere $20 million dollars was given to America. At the time of the Treaty, U.S. already controlled the city of Manila, but had not ventured into other parts of the Philippines Islands. After signing the treaty, President McKinley ordered the War Department to bring all of the islands under military control because the people of the Philippines were too "uncivilized" to govern themselves. This shocked the Filipinos, because they had expected the U.S. to help them in their struggle for independence. Not only did the U.S. not help the Philippines in their struggle for freedom, they refused to grant them freedom for forty-five years. This fight for freedom became the Philippine-American War. During the forty-five years the Philippines changed into the Japanese hands from 1942 to 1945, when it was again conquered by the United States. It was in July 5, 1945 that the U.S. once again held the Philippines but under the provisions of theMcDuffie-Tyding's Act of 1934 the Philippines gained their independence from the U.S.


Adventurous Americans arrived in the Philippines and spread to all parts, here shown in Baguio, previously untouched. Although Americans interacted with Filipinos in order to "civilize" them, Filipinos were still held in low regard.


General Frederick Funston on board the Vicksburg shortly after his deceitful capture of Emilio Aguinaldo, the leader of the Filipino revolution for independence.

President Emilio Aguinaldo of the Philippines

The Philippine-American War, known as the “Philippine Insurrection" was a nationalist revolt led by Emilio Aguinaldo in 1899 against American War. This revolt was a direct result of the invasion of the U.S. into the Philippine. The American invasion caused bitter feelings among the Filipinos. Emilio Aguinaldo, the leader of the Filipino independence movement, felt especially betrayed. His betrayal ran deep within him, not only because he liked to be called "the George Washington of the Philippine” but also because he had helped the Americans to fight the Spanish and now the Americans were fighting against him.

The wall of fire, part of the firing line near Pasig in March 15, 1899. It represents volley-firing in clock-like order at the insurgent entrenchments. The picture was taken just before the general advance"(Picturesque Old Philippines 1). "This shows effect of first smokeless powder used by Americans in the Philippines. The guns are the old Springfield model. Photograph taken during heat of the action at Pasig. In this instance it is long distance firing"(Picturesque Old Philippines 1).
For three years General Aquinaldo and his troops fought a brutal war against the military government that the U.S. had installed. In the end the overwhelming power of the American forces defeated them. During the war the Americans confined many Filipino in concentration camps. William Howard Taft was appointed head of the Philippines Commission, charged with replacing the military government with a civilian legislature. Despite the plan to prepare the Philippines for independence America continued to rule the islands till after WWII.

During the Philippines-American War the U.S. losses were 268 killed and 750 wounded. The Filipino loss was 3,227 killed and 694 wounded (Mark Twain 2).

With the defeat of Spain and the conquest of the Philippines, the United States was launched as a world power. In a passage that reads like a 1901 vision of the Central Intelligence Agency, Twain wrote that "the government thenceforth made the sly and treacherous betrayal of weak republics its amusement, and the stealing of their lands and the assassination of their liberties its trade." The country also lost its self-respect, he observed, "but after a little ceased to be troubled by this detail."

Wars in the Philippines

The Moro massacre

After the Battle of Mount Dajo, March 9, 1906. Photo from the National Archives. Copies of this photo, which was later described as "the most hideous Philippine picture . . . published in the United States during the subjugation of the islands," were distributed to the press by the Anti-Imperialist League.



"Insurgents" during the American war. From the Philippines Islands and far East photograph albums, Duke University.

"C.G. 19th Inf. where Capt. E.B. Smith was killed" From the Philippines Islands and far East photograph albums, Duke University

"Covering the advance of Filipino insurgents “Scriven(essay writer) describes the people of Bohol as protesting the occupation of the Americans, but not rebelling against the occupying forces. This photo depicts an aspect of the war that did occur between the U.S. Army and the "insurgents" who forcibly rebelled against colonization. From "Scenes taken in the Philippines and on the Pacific" by J.D. Givens, Duke University Special Collections.
Skirmish Line halting for rest before wading a paddy-field, Philippine Campaign.

Americanization:

The effects of American imperialism on the Philippines are numerous. Some, however, stand out, most notably the installation of an American-style democracy and the prevalent attitude that anything American is "good". Many of those in lowland Philippines, and most of the Christian population, for that matter, grew up in an increasingly Americanized society. The following American influence in the Philippines says it all:


GOVERNMENT


Photo sample of the partisan politics that started in American.


Partisan politics was one of those institutions which the Americans brought to the Philippines. The municipal elections that followed the implantation of American sovereignty gave the Filipinos the first taste of politics, American-brand. To be sure there was at the beginning no furor, no color to campaigns, for the Filipinos were as to yet too politically naïve to understand the intricacies of modern politics. With the founding of political parties, however, they began to discern the American political patter: issue was outlined, platforms were laboriously prepared, speeches were delivered and political chest funds accumulated. Up to approximately 1916, however Philippine national elections were honest and based on the merits of the issues involved. After the creation of a bicameral legislature in 1916, Philippine politics followed the American groove. The electors hitherto innocent began to be corrupted by politics. Expenses of candidates soared; the electors tasting for the first time the power of the ballot, began to think in terms of personality and personal welfare. Thus many American political practices finally found a rich soil in the Philippines. But over and above the negative effects of the imported brand of politics, the Filipinos learned the intricate machinery of government. The control of the law making body and the Filipinization policy of Harrison led to a deep political consciousness. The suppressed nationalism of the first decade of American rule was released and ultimately found expression in the agitation for political independence. (Agoncillo, 1998, pp. 379-380)



RELIGION

During the Spanish-Colonization of the Philippines, Filipinos were forced to convert to Christianity (Roman Catholic), for 333 years Filipinos were experiencing Christian religion as it is the Spaniard’s prior. But after the Philippines was dominated by American, Protestantism then arrived which was the religious belief of the Americans. On the other hand America in return also adopted Roman Catholic Christianity after the American invasion in the Philippines on July 4, 1946. At the same time, missionaries of the Jehovah's Witnesses arrived in the Philippine during the American Occupation (1898-1945). For this reason Jehovah’s Witnesses Religion was also adopted in the Philippines. They have been involved in several court controversies because of their stand on flag-saluting and blood transfusions. They are best known by their preaching in pairs from house to house. Currently there are more than 150,000 members in the Philippine as of the year 2006.

The Iglesia ni Cristo church for protestants in the Philippines which was established by Felix Manalo.


Jehovah’s Witnesses preaching to each other from house to house in New York, as what they are known to be good at.


ECONOMY AND LIVELIHOOD


The economic development of the Philippines under the United States may be attributed to the free trade relations that the Americans imposed upon the country. As early as 1902, a reduction of 25% was allowed on goods coming from the Philippines. Nevertheless, the Americans Congress consistently refused to admit Philippine products into the U.S. free of duty. It was not until 1909, when the American Congress passed the Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act that partial free trade relations between the Philippines and the U.S. were established. Under this Act, all Philippine exports, except rice, were allowed to enter American markets free of duty within certain quota limits. On the other hand, American Congresspassed the Simmons-Underwood Tariff Act in 1913 which abolished the quota limitations on Philippine export products like hemp, sugar,and tobacco. (Agoncillo, 1998, pp. 374-375)



The Manila Lungsod Of trade and commerce institutions as of today. Taken from the 17th Floor of World Trade Center Buidling, Binondo Manila, view of the Manila Bay (right) Manila City Hall (left) Intramuros (walled city – center) and high rise buildings in Manila.



ARTS, CULTURE and TRADITION:




Filipinos of all classes and origins soon began adopting Western aspects of civilization, among them clothes. Filipinos during the American invasion also adopted the American fashion statement using hats, long sleeved coats and long long sleeved polos inside it with matching neck tiesfor men.


In art america contributed the oil painting and blood red paint.



oil paintings- is the process of painting with pigments that are bound with a medium of drying oil. Often an oil such as linseed was boiled with a resin such as pine resin or even frankincense.


Blood red paint- is a dark paint also known as alizarin crimson.chool.

TRANSPORTATION


Sevel transposrtations have been influenced by the Americans in the the Philippines, such us the submarine,carretelas,railways,ancient bull carts, cars etc.



SOCIAL STRUCTURE

Many Americans believe in a simple three-class model that includes the:

Rich- This term is applied to a wide array of elite groups existing in the United States.

Middle class-is an ambiguously defined social classes in the united states. While the concept remains largely ambiguous in popular opinion and common language use, contemporary sociologists have put forward several, more or less congruent, theories on the middle class.

Poor- This measure recognizes poverty as a lack of those goods and services commonly taken for granted by members of mainstream society



SYSTEM OF EDUCATION

In the System of writing

  • The American system of vertical wrting
  • The vertical writing began some 15 years ago as a hygienic movement. Certain german medical experts pronounced in favor of vertical rather than sloping penmanship for the prevention of certain ophthalmic and orthopedic troubles, which seemed to result largely the prevailing style of writing in the schools.
  • The system has found many advocates in all parts of Europe, and is now well established in most of the German States, having been introduced either experimentally or finally a large number of schools.
  • There are some advantages of vertical system or writing:
  • Allows the pupils to sit in a natural position, namely, fronting the desk
  • Both eyes are exercised equally
  • The hand is not cramped in slop in writing
  • It is more easily learned


In Education


For the Filipinos, education became important to them. Spreading of democracy and formation of good citizens, including the rights and responsibilities of the people, were the focus of American education in the country.The Americans spread their culture, particularly the English language to the Filipinos.The Filipinos are given the chance to built public schools. The first teachers of the Filipinos were the volunteer Filipino soldiers. The part of their mission was to build classrooms in every place where they were assigned. These soldiers stopped teaching when a group of teachers from the US came to the Philippines in June 1901. In August 1901, 600 teachers called Thomasites. This group became successful in their mission.

From age 7 was required to register is schools located in their own province. The students were given free school materials. There were three levels of education during the American period. The "elementary" level consisted of four primary years and 3 intermediate years. The "secondary" or high school level consisted of four years; and the third was the "college" or tertiary level.Many elementary and secondary schools were opened in cities and provinces. Normal, vocational, agricultural, and business schools were also opened. There were also colleges during the American period. Some of these colleges are: Philippine Normal School in 1901 (now a university)and other normal schools troughout the country such as Silliman University (1901),Negros Oriental High School (1902),St. Paul University Dumaguete(1904), Cebu Normal School (1915) also a university at present, Iloilo Normal School in 1902 (now West Visayas State University) and Zamboanga Normal School in 1904 (now Western Mindanao State University) ; National University (1901); University of Manila (1914); Philippine Women University (1919); and Far Eastern University (1933). Examples of vocational schools are: the Philippine Nautical School, Philippine School of Arts and Trades and the Central Luzon Agriculture .The University of the Philippines was also founded in 1908.


For a clearer understanding here are some sites of videos you may view about the american influences in the Philippines:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhDvYMvzoTQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GcJDiqY_UM8&NR=1


Bibliography:

Asms..k12.ar.us. American Imperialism. 18, February 1998. May 18, 2009 <http://asms.k12.ar.us/classes/humanities/worldstud/97-98/imper/Philippines/usa.htm>
Bruce. Americanization Begns.n.d. May 18, 2009.
Agoncillo, Teodoro A. History of the Philippines: Before the conquest. Quezon City: Garotech, 1990.
Wikepedia.com.Religion in the Philippines. 5,April 2009, 1,May 18, 2009<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandugo>

Spanish Period


“PHILIPPINES UNDER IMPERIAL SPAIN”

System of Government

"This fascinating political cartoon comes from El Debate, Spanish language news daily during the Spanish colonial period in the Philippines"

· Centralized form of government.

· Divided into two units:

Central government:

· The King entrusted the colony to the governor-general, who had the highest position in the government.

· The Royal Audiencia was the Supreme Court of the Philippines.

· The Residencia and the Visitador were the special courts that investigated on the conduct of the governor-general and other high-ranking Spanish officials.

Local Government (provinces, cities, towns and barrios)

· The provinces were divided into two:

1. Alcaldia which recognized Spain's possession over the land
2. corregimiento where the people had not succumbed to its ruling power.

· Ayuntamiento or the city government was the center of the society, religion, culture and business.

· The pueblo was governed by the gobernadorcillo, the highest position for Filipino politicians.

· The Cabeza de Barangay governed the barrios.

Frailocracia

During the Spanish regime, there was union of church and state:

· The governor-general had power over the church.

· The friars, on the other hand, played a very important role in the government.

· The Archbishop was only the most powerful in the church. However, it seemed that the church exercised more power than the government and because of this; the government in the Philippines was called "Frailocracia," a government controlled by the friars.


Religion

Christianity's Introduction:

· Spanish colonizers succeeded in introducing Christianity to the islands.

· Christianity represents over 85% of religious beliefs. They were highly successful in the region of modern day Luzon and Visayas but were unsuccessful in Mindanao, south region, where Moslems staved off the Spanish efforts.

· It was a forced the induction of Christianity -- leading to thousands of deaths and tortures of the residents of the islands.



'Christianization' Strategies Employed by the Spanish:


"Early Spanish Chapel, Luzon"

There are a number of reasons why Spanish missionaries were successful in this attempt:

1. Mass baptism - the initial practice of baptizing large numbers of Filipinos at one time enabled the initial conversion to Christianity.. It is said that many Filipinos associated baptism with their own indigenous 'healing rituals', which also rely on the symbolism of holy water--very typical of Southeast Asian societies.

2. Reduccion policies - in areas where Filipinos lived scattered across the landscape in small hamlets, the Spanish military employed a resettlement policy that they had used successful. This policy was called reduccion, and essentially meant a forced relocation of small, scattered settlements into one larger town.

· The policy was designed for the convenience of administration of the Spanish colony's population, a way for a small number of armed Spanish constabulary to control more easily the movements and actions of a large number of Filipinos.

· It was also designed to enable Spain to collect taxes from their Christianized converts. Throughout Spanish rule, Christianized Filipinos were forced to pay larger taxes than indios, or native, unchristian zed peoples.

· The policy also made it easier for a single Spanish Catholic friar to 'train' Filipinos in the basic principles of Christianity.
The policy was successful in some areas but impossible to enforce. Spanish archives are full of exasperated colonial officials complaining about how such settlements were 'all but abandoned' in many cases after only a few weeks.

3. Attitude of the Spanish clergy in the early phase - Spanish friars was forced to learn the native language of the peoples they sought to convert. Without schools that trained people in Spanish, the Spanish friars had no choice but to say Christian mass and otherwise communicate in the vernacular languages of the Philippines.

In the late Spanish period, in contrast, Spanish priests enraged many Filipinos for failing to:

a) Allow otherwise 'trained' Filipino priests to ascend into the higher echelons of the Catholic Church hierarchy in the Philippines;

b) Return much of the land they had claimed as 'friar estates' to the Philippine landless farmers;

c) Recognizing nascent and emerging Filipino demands for more autonomy and a greater say in how the colony was to be managed.

4. Adaptation of Christianity to the local context - Filipinos were mostly animistic in their religious beliefs and practices prior to Spanish intervention.

· In most areas they revered the departed spirits of their ancestors through ritual offerings, and also believed in a variety of nature spirits. Such beliefs were central to healing practices, harvest rites, and to maintaining a cosmological balance between this world and the afterlife. Spirits were invisible, but also responsible for both good and bad events. Spirits could be blamed for poor harvests, illness, and bad luck generally. Yet Filipinos believed that proper ritual feasting of the spirits would appease them, and result in good harvests, healthy recovery of the ill, and the fertility of women.

  • The legacy of Spanish conquest and colonial rule in the Philippines, as is true of all colonial attempts to 'master' or manage indigenous populations, is mixed.
  • On the one hand, Spanish clergy were very destructive of local religious practices. They systematically destroyed indigenous holy places and 'idols', or statues and representations of indigenous spirits, gods or goddesses.
  • They also tried to stamp out all examples of native scripts and literature for fear that Filipinos were using exotic symbols to foment rebellion.
  • The Spanish also imposed new 'moralities' on Filipinos by discouraging slave holding, polygamy, gambling, and alcohol consumption that were a natural part of the indigenous social and religious practices.
  • Hispanic rule left a legacy of syncretism, rather than totally destructive, elements.
  • Spanish clergy introduced some very European features of Catholic practice that blended well with indigenous ritual practices.
  • Spanish Catholic priests relied on vivid, theatrical presentations of stories of the Bible in order to help Filipinos understand the central messages of Christianity.
  • This colonial legacy lives on whenever Filipino Catholics re-enact through religious dramas the passion of Christ, or Christ's martyrdom, during Holy Week.

"The beginning of a Pasyon play,Manila"


"Christ and two disciples in the Garden of Gethsemane"


"The Devil tempts Christ"

"Christ is led away by Roman soldiers"


"The Crucifixion of Christ and Two Thieves"

· Other Filipino ceremonies also mark the Christian calendar, such as during the rituals surrounding death.

· Death is always an occasion that marks a society's traditions, and in the Philippines funerals are usually accompanied by somber village processions and music, essential parts of Roman Catholic ritual practice.

· Filipino indigenous religious beliefs traditionally celebrated rice planting and harvesting times, the death anniversaries of departed ancestors, and these have been blended in meaning and timing with Catholic rites such as All Saints Day and Fiesta de Mayo.

· In this kind of religious syncretism, blending the rites and meaning of two totally separate societies, the outcome is often a surprise rather than a foregone conclusion.

Economy

Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade



· The Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade was the main source of income for the colony during its early years. Service was inaugurated in 1565 and continued into the early 19th century.

· The Galleon trade brought silver from New Spain and silk from China by way of Manila. This way, the Philippines earned its income through buy and sell - that is, they bought silk from China for resale to New Spain and then bought American silver for resale to China.

· The trade was very prosperous. But It neglected the development of the colony's local industries which affected the Indios since agriculture was their main source of income. In addition, the building and operation of galleons put too much burden on the colonists' annual polo y servicio, resulted in cultural and commercial exchanges between Asia and the Americas that led to the introduction of new crops and animals to the Philippines notably tobacco that gave the colony its first real income which benefit extended to the common Indio.

· The trade lasted for over two hundred years, and ceased in 1821 with the secession of American colonies from Spain.

Royal Society of Friends of the Country

· Jose de Basco y Vargas, formally established the Real Sociedad Economica de Amigos del Pais composed of leading men in business, industry and profession.

· The society was tasked to explore and exploit the island's natural bounties.

  • The society led to the creation of Plan General Economico of Basco which implemented the monopolies on the areca nut, tobacco, spirited liquors and explosives.
  • It offered local and foreign scholarships and training grants in agriculture and established an academy of design.
  • It was also credited to the carabao ban of 1782, the formation of the silversmiths and gold beaters guild and the construction of the first papermill in the Philippines in 1825.
  • It was introduced on 1780, vanished temporarily on 1787-1819, 1820-1822 and 1875-1822 and ceased to exist in the middle of the 1890s.
Royal Company of the Philippines

· March 10, 1785, Charles III created the Royal Philippine Company with a 25 year charter.

· It was granted exclusive monopoly of bringing to Manila, Philippines; Chinese and Indian goods and shipping them directly to Spain via the Cape of Good Hope.

· It was stiffly objected by the Dutch and English who saw it as a direct attack on their trade of Asian goods.

· It was also vehemently opposed by the traders of the Galleon trade who saw it as competition. This gradually resulted into the death of both institutions: The Royal Philippine Company in 1814 and the Galleon trade in 1815.

Taxation

· To support the colony, several forms of taxes and monopolies were imposed.

  • The buwis (tribute), which could be paid in cash or kind (tobacco, chickens, produce, gold, blankets, cotton, rice, etc., depending on the region of the country), was initially was fixed at 8 reales (one real being 12.5 centavos) and later increased to 15 reales, apportioned as follows: ten reales buwis, one real diezmos prediales (tithes), one real to the town community chest, one real sanctorum tax, and three reales for church support
  • Also collected were the bandalâ (from the Tagalog word mandalâ, a round stack of rice stalks to be threshed), an annual enforced sale and requisitioning of goods such as rice.
  • Custom duties and income tax were also collected. By 1884, the tribute was replaced by the Cedula personal, wherein colonists were required to pay for personal identification. Everyone over the age of 18 was obliged to pay.
Forced Labor (Polo y servicio)


The system of forced labor otherwise known as polo y servicio evolved within the framework of the encomienda system, introduced into the South American colonies by the Conquistadores and Catholic priests who accompanied them.

· Polo y servicio is the forced labor for 40 days of men ranging from 16 to 60 years of age who were obligated to give personal services to community projects. One could be exempted from polo by paying the falla (corruption of the Spanish Falta, meaning "absence"), a daily fine of one and a half real.

· In 1884, labor was reduced to 15 days. The polo system was patterned after the Mexican repartimento, selection for forced labor

Cultural Transformation

· Baybayin (syllabic writing)‏


Mid-18th century

Earliest Books Published at the Parian of Manila (1593)‏:
  • Doctrina Christiana, en lengua española, y tagala
  • Fr. Juan Cobo’s Wu-chu T’ien-chu cheng-chiao chen-ch’uan shih-lu (A Discussion of the Real Traditional Propagation of the True Religion)‏
  • Doctrina Christiana en letra y lengua china
  • Ordinationes generals­- earliest known de visu work by means of movable types (Juan de Vera, 1604)‏
Mid-16th century

  • ”Filibustero”- an uneducated Filipino who knew Spanish
17th century

Earliest known Filipino writers:
  • Unknown Tagalog poet (1605)- May bagyo ma’t may rilim
  • Fernando Bagongbanta- Salamat nang ualang hanga
  • Tomas Tinpin (1610)- Auit
  • Pedro Suarez Ossorio (1627)- Salamat nang ualang hoyang
18th century: Ranked the Most Famous Ones
  1. Gaspar Aquino de Belen
  2. Felipe de Jesus
  3. Jose dela Cruz (Huseng Sisiw)‏
Theocentric Literature
  • Awit (dodecasyllabic quatrain)‏
  • Corrido (octosyllabic quatrain)‏
  • Metrical romances ( written by Ananias Zorilla, Jose dela Cruz, Francisco Baltazar)‏
  • Anti-Muslim melodrama “Moro-Wars”- moro-moro or komedy
  • European- “comedias de capa y espada”
  • Spanish- “obra caballerescas
  • Lenten season- pasyon
  • Zarzuela- latest dramatic form (1870)

Visual Arts
  • Imagenes
  • Santoses
  • Jewelry
Folk Arts (whittled bamboo arch decorations):
  • Kaluskos
  • Palaspas
  • Moriones
  • Rosaries
  • Combs
  • Parols
  • Pastillas wrappers
Colorful art Presentation in foods:
  • Pan de San Nicolas
  • Atsara
  • Sapin-sapin
Painting
  • Faustino Quiotang (1820)- Sedes Sapientiae and San Jose with child Jesus
  • Damian Domingo, an insular, director of the Academia de Dibujo (1827-1833)‏
  • Juan Arceo
  • Juan Transfiguracion Nepomuceno and families
  • Severino Flavier Pablo
  • Hilarion Soriano
  • Jose Honorato Lozano – “Pepe Vigia” or “Bahia” and “Letras y Figuras”
  • Lorenzo Guerrero- “Academia de Dibujo y Pintura”
  • Simon Flores
  • Regino Garcia y Baza
  • Juan Luna - Spolarium
  • Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo
19th century
  • Esteban Villanueva- 14 tableaux of the Ambaristo or basi revolt of 1807
  • Laguna- Jose Dans who executed Final Judgment and Heaven, Earth , Hell
  • Tayabas- Vicente Villaseñor of Lucban
  • Cavite- Roman Faustino’s Ensueño (1892)‏
Printmaking, Engraving and Typography
  • Nicolas dela Cruz Bagay
  • Cipriano Romualdo Bagay
  • Francisco Suarez
  • Laureano Atlas
  • Felipe Sevilla
  • Candido Lopez
  • Juan delos Santos –sculpted the baroque altar of the San Agustin church
Paete woodcarvers
  • Mariano Madriñan
  • Aurelio Buhay
  • Isabelo Tampingco
  • Sotero Garcia
  • Romualdo T. de Jesus
  • Ciriaco Gaudinez
  • Felix Pardo de Tavera
  • Ciriaco Arevalo
School of Music in Lumbang (Laguna) taught:
  • Fandango
  • Seguidilla
  • Jota
Composers:
  • Marcelo Adonay
  • Simplicio Solis
  • Julian Felipe
  • Julio Nakpil
  • Dolores Paterno

Social Transformation

Adoption of Hispanic Names
  • Decreed by Gov. Narciso Claveria in 1849
  • Based on compiled names of saints, indigenous and Chinese patronymics, flora and fauna, geographical names, and the arts
  • Filipinos were obligated to adopt surnames like Rizal, Del Pilar or Luna althugh some ndigenous surnames like Mabini, Malantic, Dandan and Paganiban, were retained
  • Catagalogo alfabetico de apellidos contained some derogatory names like “Utut”, “Ung-goy”, and even “Casillas”
Houses
  • bahay na bato with a wide azotea (batalan in original), retaining the banguerahan and providing an aljibe or a well for water – supply
Foreign Cuisines
  • Spanish indigenized dishes like adobo, menudo, sarciado, puchero or mechado and the Chinise – derived noodle preparations Filipinized into pancit malabon and pancit luglog
Change in Dressing
  • kanggan and bahag to barong tagalog or camisa chino
  • putong to hats
  • Shoes and slippers as part of men’s fashion
  • Baro and saya for women developed into mestiza dress
  • Jewelry and ornaments, gold and tortoise peineta, earrings of different sizes and shapes
Spanish Loan Words
  • dasal from rezar
  • Dalandan from naraja
  • Sinigwelas from ciruela
Conversely, the Filipino also contributed to enrich the Spanish language
  • Camarin from camalig
  • Carinderia from karihan
  • Molave from mulawin
  • Compadrazgo (ritual co – parenthood) came with baptism and marriages
  • Magellan served as Humabon’s padrino, and Legazpi stood as Rajah Tupa’s godfather
  • Intermarriages which resulted in mixed blood or mestizos (1883)‏
  • La Funeraria, the first Philippine funeral parlor was established by Carlos March in Manila which advertised European – made coffins, embalming, “French – style packing,” tombstones, and guaranteed “permanent service”
Conversion of the Filipinos
  • Fiestas honoring the saints
  • Fiestas during Holy Week, on Corpus Christi, and the feast day of the patron saint
  • Pomp and pageantry of the religious processions
  • Exotic Hispanic dances and music
  • Religious dramas of the sinakulo and the komedya or moro – moro
  • Cofadias and sodalities of the Filipino laymen and laywomen honoring the Virgin Mary

Technologies
· Quiles
· Arana
· Victoria
· Calesa
· Carretela
· Bicycles
· Telephones
· Telegraphs
· Kingke

Infrastructures

· Ferrocarril de Manila-Dagupan

· Compañia de los Tranvias de Filipinas


· Puente Colgante



· Cable linking

· Public lighting system (using coconut oil)

· La Electricista de Manila



Social Structures

· Principalia - nobility class was the social and educated class in the towns of colonial Philippines composed of the Gobernadorcillo (Town Mayor), or the Cabeza de Barangay (Chief of the Barangay) who governed the districts and the awardees of the medal of Civil Merit.

  1. Exempted from forced labor during the colonial period
  2. Were allowed to vote, be elected to public office and be addressed by the title: Don or Doña
  3. Given certain roles in the Church, such as assisting the priest in pastoral and religious activities

"Costume of a family belonging to Principalía during the 19th century. Picture taken from the exhibit in Villa Escudero Museum in San Pablo Laguna, Philippines."

· Ilustrados- (Spanish for "erudite," "learned," or "enlightened ones"). constituted the Filipino educated class during the Spanish colonial period in the late 19th century
  • They were the middle class who were educated in Spanish and exposed to Spanish liberal and European nationalist ideals.
"A late 19th century photograph of the Ilustrados in Madrid, Spain (ca. 1890)"
  • Composed of native-born intellectuals and cut across ethnolinguistic and racial lines
1. Indios, person of pure Austronesian (Malay/Malayo-Polynesian) ancestry (natives)



2. Insulares, Spaniards born in Spain who took important positions in the Spanish government in the Philippines.


3. Mestizos, Filipinos of mixed indigenous Filipino (Austronesian people/Malay/Malayo-Polynesian), or European or Chinese ancestry.



4. Peninsulares, Spaniards who are born in Spain



System of Writing
· Latin alphabet


Educational System

"Spanish priest headed the formal education; the focus of the education is “Christian Doctrines.” Students were not allowed to speak their own language, only the Spanish language"

· Formal educational system.

· The Religious congregations paved the way in establishing schools from the primary level to the tertiary level of education.

· The schools focused on the Christian Doctrines.

· There was a separate school for boys and girls.

· The wealthy Filipinos or the Ilustrados were accommodated in the schools.

· Colonial education brought more non-beneficial effects to the Filipinos.

Educational Decree 1863

1. The first educational system for students in the country was established by virtue of the Education Decree of 1863.

2. The decree required the government to provide school institutions for boys and girls in every town.

3. Spanish schools started accepting Filipino students. It was during this time when the intellectual Filipinos emerged.

4. The Normal School was also established which gave men the opportunity to study a three-year teacher education for the primary level.

5. The friars controlled the educational system during the Spanish times. They owned different schools, ranging from the primary level to the tertiary levels of education.

6. The missionaries took charge in teaching, controlling and maintaining the rules and regulations imposed to the students. These missionaries emphasized the teachings of the Catholic religion starting from the primary level to the tertiary level of education. The students in the primary level were taught the Christian Doctrines, the reading of Spanish books and a little of the natives' language. Science and Mathematics were not very much taught to the students even in the universities. Aside from the Christian Doctrines taught, Latin was also taught to the students instead of Spanish.

7. The schools before were exclusive for the Spaniards. The Filipinos were only able to enter the schoo1 in the late 19th century. The schools also limited their accommodations to the sons of wealthy Filipino families in 1863.Although the schools were already open for Filipinos, the friars still believed that the Filipinos would not be able to match their skills and that the only way for the Filipinos to learn fast was to impose upon them strict discipline which means applying corporal punishment.

Schools Built By the Spaniards

· The schools for boys and girls were separated.

Schools for Boys

· The first established schools were exclusive for the boys.

· The Augustinians built the first school in the Philippines situated in Cebu in 1565.

· College was equivalent to a university during the Spanish regime. The student graduated with the degree in Bachelor of Arts (Bachiller en Artes).

· The first college school for the boys was the "Colegio de San Ignacio" which was established by the Jesuits in Manila in 1589.

· They also established the "Colegio de San Idelfonso" in Cebu in 1595.
· In 1601, "Colegio de San Jose" was established.

· In 1589, the "Escuela Pia" was entrusted by the government to the Jesuits. Later, this was called Ateneo de Municipal which is now the famous Ateneo de Manila University.

· The Dominicans also made a name as they established one of the best universities in the Philippines, the University of Santo Tomas, which was opened in 1611.

· In 1630, the Dominicans established another university, the "San Juan de Letran" for the orphaned boys.

Schools for Girls:

· "Colegio de Santa Potenciana" was the first school and college for girls. This was opened in 1589.

· Following the birth of the first school for women, Colegio de Santa Isabel opened in 1632.

· The religious congregations also established schools for the girls called "beaterio". The so-called "beaterio" was meant for orphaned girls who could not afford to educate themselves. The subjects taught were housekeeping, cooking, sewing and embroidery-making, and others intended for good housekeeping.

Effects of Colonial Education in the Philippines

· The effect of education to the Filipinos was only compelled to the friars' influences from their lessons based on the Christian Doctrines or teachings. Indeed, the friars were effective in evangelizing the Catholic religion to the Filipinos.

· One major failure of the educational system of the religious congregations was the withholding of the Filipinos to learn other bodies of knowledge. Besides limiting education to the teaching of Spanish, Latin, and the Filipino languages, the teaching of Religion was also given emphasis. Thus, the teaching of Mathematics and Science were neglected.

· In entirety, education during the Spanish regime was privileged only to Spanish students. The supposed Philippine education was only a means to remain in the Philippines as colonizers. For this reason, the Filipinos became followers to the Spaniards in their own country. Even auspicious Filipinos became cronies, to the extent that even their life styles were patterned from the Spaniards.

· Several educated Filipinos referred to as ilustrados began movements directed towards change in the system of government in the Philippines. Despite their wealth and education, the ilustrados were still considered by the Spaniards to be inferior. One of the goals of the ilustrado was to be in the same level with the proud Spaniards. The growing number of ilustrados in the Philippines maybe considered one of the major effects of education by the Spaniards in the Philippines.