dagohoy v1-6r
TRANSCRIPT
NATIVIST UPRISINGFrancisco Dagohoy
An Overview
Nativist Uprising/Nativism Against the Spaniards These ‘nativistic’ heroes (Tamblot, Bankaw,
Tapar, Dagohoy, Sumuray, etc) apply the Catholic belief to their revolts
*e.g. Tapar declared himself a god Nativism weakened for a while, but got
revived again because the church declined
(Constantino, 1975)
LIFEFrancisco Dagohoy
Name
‘DAGON SA HUYUHOY’
Talisman of the breeze(Bohol Chronicle, 2006)
Francisco Sendrijas
Family
No documents carry the family roots of Dagohoy, possibly because the Spanish authorities were disinterested to record facts of someone who humiliated them
Father: Polon/Apolonio Mother: Sisa or NarcisaSagarino, Francisco, Maximino,
NarcisaFrancisco was born in 1724, in
Cambitoon, Inabangan, Bohol(accdg to Sinsano, grandson of Francisco)
The family were devout Catholics The males – farming and fishing The females – wove blankets and mats Francisco was very athletic He married Berinja Bugsok
Francisco was believed to have supernatural powers, to his and his followers advantage to power
HISTORY OF BOHOLFrancisco Dagohoy
Name derived from‘Bo-ol’
A town in Tagbilaran, one of which Magellan first went to
1595 – it became a Jesuit mission, a part of Cebu, a residencia
1854 – it became an independent politico-military province
1565 – venue of Rajah Sikatuna and Miguel Lope de Legazpi’s blood compact (in Tagbilaran)
BOHOL – where two very significant revolts took place: Tamblot Uprising and the…
(Boholescapade, 2011)
DAGOHOY REBELLIONFrancisco Dagohoy
It lasted 85 years, from 1744-1829 Ignited not because of religious conflicts, but
because of forced labor, Spanish oppression, bandala, excessive tax collection, and payment of tributes
*bandala – an annual quota of products assigned to the natives for compulsory sale to the government (VUW, 2004)
Dagohoy was triggered most because the Jesuit priest refused to give his brother a Christian burial (his brother died in service while chasing a fugitive who went against Christianity)
Father Gaspar Morales refused to give Sagarino the burial because dying in a duel was banned by the church.
The signal for the rebellion was led off by the killing of Father Giuseppe Lamberti, and eventually of Father Morales
Dagohoy started a free government in the mountains, which started with 3,000 followers and got up to 20,000
Headquarters: Francisco Dagohoy Cave, in the town of Danao
It is said that in one of the passages of the cave, an underwater path led to dry land, and everytime the Spaniards came to investigate, Dagohoy would hide in the breathing space
Twenty Spanish Governor-Generals tried to stop the rebellion, but failed
1825-1827 – On General Mariano Ricafort’s order, Alcalde-Mayor Jose Lazaro Cairo with 2,200 troops invaded Bohol but failed to crush the rebellion
1828 – Captain Manuel Sanz finally subdued the patriots and ceased the rebellion
LEGACYFrancisco Dagohoy
Death
He was 101 years oldBecause of Rabies
BOHOL PROVINCIAL FLAGThe two bolos symbolize Tamblot’s
and Dagohoy’s revolts
STAMPS,STATUES
(As Declared by former Pres. Carlos P. Romulo)
THANK YOU FOR LISTENING!
HIST 1 V1-6RAnsay, Gonzales, Magsino, Marquez, Melanio, Ona, Rizal, Sayson, Tayo
Bibliography
n.a. (2008). In search of Francisco Dagohoy- The Hero. Retrieved 27 August 2011 from blogspot.com:
http://franciscodagohoythehero.blogspot.com/
n.a. (2008). Francisco Dagohoy. Retrieved 27 August 2011 from blogspot.com: http://biopinoys.blogspot.com/2008/06/francisco-dagohoy.html
n.a. (2008). The Dagohoy Rebellion. Retrieved 27 August 2011 from watawat.net:
http://www.watawat.net/pg018.html Ramos, John Louie. (2010).
Biography: Francisco Dagohoy. Retrieved 27 August 2011 from helium.com: http://www.helium.com/items/1871986-biography-of-francisco-dagohoy
n.a. (2010). Kapima Political Movement. Retrieved August 26, 2011 from
blogspot.com: kapimapoliticalmovement.blogspot.com/2010/06/francisco-dagohoy-and-85-years-of-bohol.html
n.a. (2006). Francisco Dagohoy. Retrieved August 26, 2011 from bohol- philippines.com: www.bohol-philippines.com/francisco-dagohoy.html
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. (2004). Philippines Timeline. Retrieved August 30, 2011 from philippines-timeline.com: philippines-timeline.com/spanish.htm
Constantino, Renato & Constantino, Letizia. (1975). The Philippines: A Past Revisited. Tala Publishing Series.