the early revolts were against the Spanish..
Chief Lupu Lupu...he ate Magelleon.
Then Rizal was the guy who fought the Spanish.
The U.S. fought in the Philippines and their was much loss of life.
Americas dirty little war.
2007-01-30 15:17:32
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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There are soooo many. Dating back to when Ferdinand Magellan and the Spanish galleons arrived from Spain the natives Filipinos have resisted foreign invasion. And for 333 years of Spanish rule, there were revolts in almost all the areas where the Spanish went and took the land, raped the women, eradicated the Filipino culture (local practices, folklore, alphabet, language)... When the Americans came, a whole new set of revolts also erupted. And when the Japanese came, revolts against the cruel Japanese were the stuff of Filipino life.
2007-01-30 23:19:07
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answer #2
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answered by chelsea 3
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After Lapulapu and Magellan, many other expeditions were sent from Mexico, a Spanish colony at that time, to colonize the Philippines. Legazpi (last name) was sent on Spain's fifth try, and Legazpi, instead of using war and force to overcome the Filipinos, tried to win their friendship and succeeded. For 333 years Spain ruled the Philippines and in 1821, Mexico, another colony of Spain at that time, revolted. Before, Spain was known as an unbeatable colonizer, but the revolt of the Mexicans spurred the Philippines to revolt. That is all I can tell you from my small knowledge of the Philippines.
2007-01-31 04:16:27
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answer #3
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answered by Alisha N 1
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the first revolt was in Cebu...with their leader named "LAPU-LAPU" he slashed Magellan "Spanish Regime", until the second was Jose Rizal through his writing and other revolutionalist "Andres Bonifacio and General Aguinaldo and etc." finally made the independence of the Philippines...
next for that was Japanese Regime, filipino fought...
next for that was American Regime, filipino did fought for some portion areas...
now the question of all these, what exact place which all regime did not loss in the some battles? it is mindanao...
and you will wonder, why is mindanao is not conquered and it is a part of philippines...MY ANSWER IS DUE TO TECHNICAL ANNEXATION OF THE PHILIPPINES WHEN IT IS FORMING ITS TERROTORIAL BOUNDARIES AND OTHER SPECIFICATION!!! because they did not provide any representative that time that is to represent Mindanao...
THE OUTCOMES? wars, wars, conflict, conflict between Mindanao and Philippines with its related pact...
2007-01-31 04:21:54
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answer #4
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answered by aRnObIe 4
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the earliest known revolution was the battle of mactan against Ferdinand Magellan and Lapu-lapu (a visayan chieftain)
Lapulapu is considered one of the greatest figures of ancient Philippine history. Although the first thing that usually comes to mind when the name of Lapulapu is mentioned is the fact that his battle with Magellan led to Magellan's death, Lapulapu is not honored because of that. Rather, he is honored because he was among the first to reject submission to a foreign power even though Raja1 Humabon, ruler of the neighboring island of Cebu, and other chiefs recognized the king of Spain as their sovereign and agreed to pay tribute.
On April 28, 1521, Magellan and some sixty of his men battled with the forces of Lapulapu on the shores of Mactan island. During the battle, Magellan was wounded in the leg. Seeing this, several members of Lapulapu's forces rushed at Magellan and killed him with their spears. With the death of Magellan, the Spaniards retreated to their ships and left. Lapulapu's victory is celebrated annually with a re-enactment of the battle at the site where the original battle is believed to have occurred.
2007-01-30 23:21:43
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answer #5
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answered by Niknok 3
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