Timeline of Philippine sovereignty

This article presents a timeline of the sovereignty of the Republic of the Philippines, showing transitions of sovereignty over the Philippine archipelago. It also lists invasion attempts and insurgency movements from the pre-Hispanic period to the present.[nb 1]

Timeline

Timeline of Philippine Sovereignty
PeriodSovereign EntityInvasions and Insurgencies
Archaic epoch None
1521 1565 Spain Lapu-Lapu, a local datu (native chief) of Mactan island close to Cebu, killed Ferdinand Magellan in the Battle of Mactan.
  • In 1529, Spain claimed dominion over the Philippine archipelago on the basis of Magellan's discovery, a valid mode of acquisition at the time.[3]
1565 1599 Spain
1599 1762 Spain
  • Referendum of 1599 legitimised Spain's sovereignty.[6]
  • Igorot Revolt (1601), Chinese revolt of 1602, Irraya Revolt (1621), Tamblot Revolt (1621-1622), Bankaw Revolt (1621–1622), Isneg Revolt (1625–1627), Cagayan Revolt (1639), Ladia Revolt (1643), Zambales Revolt (1645), Pampanga Revolt (1645), Sumuroy Revolt (1649–50), Pintados Revolt (1649–1650), Zambal Revolt (1660), Maniago Revolt (1660), Malong Revolt (1660–1661), Ilocano Revolt (1661), Chinese revolt of 1662, Panay Revolt (1663), Sambal Revolt (1681–1683), Tingco plot (1686), Rivera Revolt (1718), Magtanĝaga Revolt (1718), Caragay Revolt (1719), Dagohoy Rebellion (1744-1829), Agrarian Revolt (1745–1746)
1762 1764 In dispute between Britain and Spain.
  • Silang Revolt (1762–63), Palaris Revolt (1762-1765), Camarines Revolt (1762–1764), Cebu Revolt (1762–1764), Dabo and Marayac Revolt (1763), Isabela Revolt (1763)
1764 1872 Spain
  • Lagutao Revolt (1785), Ilocos Norte Revolt (1788), Magtanong and Malibiran Revolt (1787), Nueva Vizcaya Revolt (1805), Ambaristo Revolt (1807), Ilocos Norte Revolt (1811), Sarat Revolt (1815), Bayot Revolt (1822), Novales Mutiny (1823), Parang and Upay Revolt (1822–1835), Pule Revolt (1840–1841), Camerino Revolt (1865–1869), Labios Revolt (1870–1871), Cavite Mutiny (1872)
1872 1892 Spain The Ilustrados "enlightened ones" constituted the Filipino educated class during the Spanish colonial period in the late 19th century. Mostly based outside the Philippines, they helped mold the flame of a united Filipino nationalism and identity in the islands.
  • Almost all previous insurgencies were tribal, provincial and regional in nature.
August 1892 November 1897 Spain The Katipunan
  • The group, formed in 1892, became an insurgent revolutionary movement in August. The exact date is disputed, held to be either on 13 August with the tearing of cedulas or on 24 August with the "Cry of Pugad Lawin".[7] This begins what is generally called the Philippine Revolution.
  • January 1895 - Andrés Bonifacio assumes Supreme Presidency of the Katipunan.
  • August 1896 - The Katipunan Supreme Council was reorganised into a "cabinet" of an insurgent revolutionary government. The Katipunan and its successor insurgent movements regarded themselves as legitimate governments from this point onwards.[8][9]
    • 25 August - Andrés Bonifacio is elected Supremo/President of the Katipunan.
  • March 1897 - Emilio Aguinaldo is elected President by Katipunan attendees of the Tejeros Convention. He was sworn in and assumed the office despite Bonifacio having annulled the convention proceedings.[10]
November 1897 December 1897 Spain The Republic of Biak-na-Bato
  • Established as an insurgent constitutional republic on November 2, 1897, with Aguinaldo as President. This insurgent government had a constitution, President, Vice President, etc., and succeeded the Katipunan Insurgency.
December 1897 April 1898 Spain None
  • 14 December 1897 - Signing of the Pact of Biak-na-Bato, suspending the insurgency. Aguinaldo and other insurgent leaders went into voluntary overseas exile.
April 1898 May 1898 Spain Central Executive Committee
  • April 1898 - General Francisco Makabulos forms the insurgent General Executive Committee of Northern Luzon, intended to be a provisional government "until a general government of the Republic in these islands shall again be established." This insurgent government had a constitution, President, Vice President, etc.[11][12]
May 1898 June 18, 1898 Spain Unofficial dictatorial government headed by Aguinaldo
  • 1 May 1898 - Hostilities between the U.S. and Spain commenced in the Philippines.[13]
    • 19 May - Aguinaldo returns to the Philippines.[14]
    • 24 May - Aguinaldo announces in Cavite, "... I return to assume command of all the forces for the attainment of our lofty aspirations, establishing a dictatorial government which will set forth decrees under my sole responsibility, ..."[15]
June 18, 1898 June 23, 1898 Spain Official dictatorial government headed by Aguinaldo
  • 12 June 1898 - Independence is proclaimed in Kawit by the Dictatorial Government of the Philippines.[16]
  • 18 June - Aguinaldo proclaims dictatorial government.[17][18]
June 23, 1898 August 14, 1898 Spain Revolutionary government headed by Aguinaldo
  • 23 June 1899 - Aguinaldo issues proclamation replacing his dictatorial government with a revolutionary one.[19][20]
August 14, 1898 December 10, 1898 In dispute between the U.S. and Spain
  • 14 August 1898 - The day after the surrender of Manila to their forces, General Wesley Merritt established a military government over portions of the country under American control.[21]
Revolutionary government headed by Aguinaldo
December 10, 1898 January 22, 1899 United States
  • 10 December 1898 - Spain cedes the Philippines to the United States.[22]
  • 1/2 January 1899 - Acting Spanish Governor-General Diego de los Ríos returns to Manila from Zamboanga.[23]
  • 4 January - U.S. General Elwell Otis issues proclamation announcing the United States as having obtained possession and control of all of the Philippines from the Spanish.[24]
Armed activities temporarily halted by the Filipino revolutionary forces.
January 22, 1899 April 11, 1899 United States Malolos Republic
April 11, 1899 June 2, 1899 United States Malolos Republic, also known as the First Philippine Republic
June 2, 1899 April 19, 1901 In dispute between United States and the Malolos Republic
  • On June 2, 1899, undeclared general hostilities between U.S. and Philippine forces having been ongoing since February 4, the Malolos Republic promulgated a Declaration of War against the United States,[28] thereby officially beginning the Philippine–American War.
  • Emilio Aguinaldo, President of the Malolos Republic, was captured by U.S. Forces on March 23, 1901.
  • Aguinaldo signed a formal surrender document on April 19, 1901, acknowledging and accepting the sovereignty of the United States throughout the entire archipelago.[29]
  • Following the American forces taking control of Jolo on May 18, 1899 and at Zamboanga in December 1899, Moros resisted the Americans as they had the Spanish in what is termed the Moro Rebellion.
Insurgencies in the northern and southern Philippines
  • Malolos or the First Philippine Republic in the north
  • Moro rebels in the south
April 19, 1901 1902 United States Gen. Miguel Malvar, successor of Aguinaldo continued the fight until he surrendered in 1902. Clashes with Moro rebels continued in the south.
1902 1907 United States Tagalog Republic
  • In 1902, General Macario Sakay, a veteran Katipunan member, established his own Tagalog Republic (Tagalog: Repúbliká ng̃ Katagalugan), and held the presidency with Francisco Carreón as vice president. In April 1904, Sakay issued a manifesto declaring Filipino right to self-determination at a time when support for independence was considered a crime by the American occupation forces in the Philippines.[30]
  • The republic ended in 1907 when Sakay and his leading followers were arrested and executed by the American authorities as bandits.[31]
1907 1913 United States No organized insurgency
  • Scattered resistance to U.S. rule continued. Regional scale resistance continued based on the First Republic’s platform but had no centralized leadership.
1913 1935 United States No organized mass resistance but small pockets of defiance still persisted coming mostly from various religious sects, sakdalistas and die-hard republikanos.
1935 1941 United States Small segments of opposition continued from a new front, mainly from the legal nationalist and labor groups.
1941 March 29, 1942 In dispute between the United States/Commonwealth of the Philippines and Japan/Republic of the Philippines
March 29, 1942 September 2, 1945 In dispute between the United States/Commonwealth of the Philippines and Japan/Republic of the Philippines Hukbalahap
  • On March 29, 1942, peasant leaders determined to oppose the Japanese invasion met in a forest clearing at the junction of the provinces of Tarlac, Pampanga, and Nueva Ecija to organize a resistance movement against the Japanese invaders. The movement was designated Hukbó ng Bayan Laban sa Hapón (People's Army Against Japan) or Hukbalahap.[33]
September 2, 1945 July 4, 1946 United States Hukbalahap and the short lived/progressive political party, Democratic Alliance (DA).
July 4, 1946 1954 Republic of the Philippines
  • On July 4, 1946, the United States recognized the independence of the Republic of the Philippines as a separate self-governing nation.[34]
Hukbalahap.
October 16, 1947 1947 Mangsee Islands and Turtle Islands
  • On October 16, 1947, the United Kingdom transferred the administration of the Mangsee Islands and the seven Philippine Turtle Islands to the Philippines. Before that the islands were under Philippine sovereignty but United Kingdom administration.[35]
Hukbalahap[36] which later changed its name to "Hukbong Magpapalaya ng Bayan" (People's Liberation Army) or simply "Huks".
  • On May 17, 1954, Luis Taruc, leader of the Hukbalahap/Huk movement, surrendered unconditionally and announced that he "unreservedly recognized the authority of president Magsaysay and the sovereignty of the republic of the Philippines."[37]
1954 Present Republic of the Philippines None, or See Notes

See also

Notes

  1. The article may be incomplete, lacking in particular information regarding the MNLF, MILF and Abu Sayyaf groups which should possibly be included.

References

  1. Bautista 2009, p. 13.
  2. Noland 1990, p. 79.
  3. Bautista 2009, p. 12.
  4. Scott 1992, pp. 5053, notes 24 and 25 on pp. 6263.
  5. Zaide 1994, pp. 89–91.
  6. Villarroel 2009, pp. 93–133.
  7. Agoncillo 1990, p. 172.
  8. Zaide 1968, pp. 238, 285.
  9. Ricarte 1926, p. 27.
  10. Agoncillo 1990, pp. 177–178.
  11. Constantino 1975, pp. 202–203.
  12. Agoncillo 1990, pp. 185–186.
  13. Agoncillo 1990, pp. 189–190.
  14. Agoncillo 1990, p. 192.
  15. Titherington 1900, pp. 357–358.
  16. Kalaw 1927, pp. 413–417.
  17. Guevara 1972, pp. 7–12.
  18. Elliott 1917, pp. 491–493 (Appendix E: Aguinaldo's Proclamation of June 18, 1898, Establishing the Dictatorial Government)
  19. Guevara 1972, pp. 28–40.
  20. Elliott 1917, pp. 493–497 (Appendix F: Aguinaldo's Proclamation of June 23, Establishing the Revolutionary Government)
  21. Zaide 1994, p. 279.
  22. Treaty of Peace Between the United States and Spain; December 10, 1898, Yale, 2009, retrieved 2010-10-01 .
  23. Peterson 2007, pp. 10–11.
  24. Worcester 1914, p. 167.
  25. Guevara 1972, pp. 88–119.
  26. Tucker 2009, p. 8.
  27. 1 2 3 Randolph 2009, p. 197.
  28. Kalaw 1927, pp. 199–200.
  29. Worcester 1914, pp. 175–176.
  30. Constantino 1975, pp. 261–266.
  31. Constantino 1975, pp. 266–267.
  32. Rodell 2002, p. 18.
  33. Agoncillo 1990, pp. 447–449.
  34. TREATY OF GENERAL RELATIONS BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES. SIGNED AT MANILA, ON 4 JULY 1946 (PDF), United Nations, archived from the original (pdf) on July 23, 2011, retrieved 2007-12-10 .
  35. Exchange of Notes between the Government of the United Kingdom and the Government of the Republic of the Philippines regarding the transfer of the administration of the Turtle and Mangsee Islands to the Philippine Republic; Cmd 8320
  36. Agoncillo 1990, pp. 451–460.
  37. Agoncillo 1990, p. 458.

Bibliography

  • Agoncillo, Teodoro A. (1990), History of the Filipino People (Eighth ed.), University of the Philippines, ISBN 971-8711-06-6 .
  • Bautista, Lowell B. (3 September 2009), "The Historical Context and Legal Basis of the Philippine Treaty Limits" (PDF), Aegean Review of the Law of the Sea and Maritime Law, 1: 111–139, doi:10.1007/s12180-009-0003-5, ISSN 1864-9610, archived from the original (PDF) on October 11, 2010 .
  • Constantino, Renato (1975), The Philippines: A Past Revisited, I, Renato Constantino, ISBN 978-971-8958-00-1 .
  • Elliott, Charles Burke (1917), The Philippines: To the End of the Commission Government, a Study in Tropical Democracy (pdf) .
  • Guevara, Sulpico, ed. (2005), The laws of the first Philippine Republic (the laws of Malolos) 1898-1899, Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Library (published 1972) (English translation by Sulpicio Guevara).
  • Kalaw, Maximo M. (1927), The development of Philippine politics, Oriental commercial .
  • Kalaw, Maximo Manguiat (1921), The Present Government of the Philippines, Oriental commercial (published 2007), ISBN 1-4067-4636-3 . (Note: 1. The book cover incorrectly lists author as "Maximo M Lalaw", 2. Originally published in 1921 by The McCullough Printing Co., Manila.)
  • Noland, Marcus (1990), Pacific Basin developing countries: prospects for the future, Peterson Institute, ISBN 978-0-88132-081-7 .
  • Peterson, Don (2007), 1898: Five Philippine Governors-General Serve Rapid Fire Terms (PDF), Philippine Philatelic Journal .
  • Ricarte, Artemio (1926), The Hispano-Philippine Revolution, Yokohama This book was published by Ricarte himself, includes his memoirs on the Philippine Revolution.
  • Rodell, Paul A. (2002), "Culture and customs of the Philippines", Culture and customs of Asia, Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 978-0-313-30415-6 .
  • Scott, William Henry (1992), Looking for the Prehispanic Filipino: and other essays in Philippine history, New Day Publishers, ISBN 978-971-10-0524-5 .
  • Titherington, Richard Handfield (1900), A history of the Spanish–American War of 1898, D. Appleton and Company .
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (2009), The encyclopedia of the Spanish-American and Philippine-American wars: a political, social, and military history, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 978-1-85109-951-1 .
  • Villarroel, Fidel (2009), "Philip II and the "Philippine Referendum" of 1599", in Ramírez, Dámaso de Lario, Re-shaping the World: Philip II of Spain and His Time (illustrated ed.), Ateneo de Manila University Press, ISBN 978-971-550-556-7 .
  • Randolph, Carman Fitz (2009), The Law and Policy of Annexation, BiblioBazaar, LLC, ISBN 978-1-103-32481-1 .
  • Worcester, Dean Conant (1914), The Philippines: Past and Present (vol. 1 of 2), Macmillan, ISBN 1-4191-7715-X .
  • Zaide, Gregorio F. (1968), The Philippine revolution, Modern Book Co.
  • Zaide, Sonia M. (1994), The Philippines: A Unique Nation, All-Nations Publishing Co., ISBN 971-642-071-4 .
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