Worksheet 1
Worksheet 1
Worksheet 1
❖ The Cavite Mutiny, (January 20, 1872), was a brief uprising of 200 Filipino troops and
workers at the Cavite arsenal that served as justification for Spanish repression of the
fledgling Philippine nationalist movement. The harsh reaction of the Spanish
authorities, ironically, served to further the nationalist cause.
b. What are the general events that led to the martyrdom of the GomBurZa?
❖ Fathers Jose Burgos, Mariano Gomez, and Jacinto Zamora were sentenced to death by
garrotte on February 15, 1872, by Spanish colonial authorities in Bagumbayan,
Philippines, for treason, sedition, and subversion. They were executed two days after
their verdict. The charges against Fathers Gomez, Burgos, and Zamora stemmed from
their alleged involvement in the Cavite Naval Yard workers' uprising. Governor Rafael
Izquierdo believed that the Filipinos would form their own government, and three
priests were allegedly nominated as the leaders of the planned government in order to
break free from the Spanish government.
❖ The death of GomBurZa instilled strong feelings of rage and resentment among
Filipinos. They grilled Spanish officials and demanded reforms in response to the Spanish
authorities' unfavorable governance. Ironically, the martyrdom of the three priests
aided in the formation of the Propaganda Movement, which sought reforms and
informed the Spanish people about the abuses of its colonial authorities in the Philippine
Islands.
❖ Aside from the execution of GomBurZa, the military court sentenced 41 mutineers to
death on January 28, 1872. The next day, however, Governor Rafael Izquierdo pardoned
28 mutineers and sentenced the rest. On February 6, 1872, Governor Izquierdo
commuted the death sentences of 11 mutineers to life imprisonment. Along with the
three martyrs, Enrique Paraiso, Maximo Innocencio, and Crisanto Delos Reyes were
sentenced to ten years in prison.
❖ Trinidad Hermenegildo José Mara Juan Francisco Pardo de Tavera y Gorricho (13 April
1857 – 26 March 1925) was a Filipino physician, historian, and politician of Spanish and
Portuguese descent. He wrote the Filipino version of the bloody incident in Cavite.
❖ According to Jose Montero y Vidal, a Spanish historian, the Mutiny was an attempt to
remove and overthrow the Spanish colonizers in the Philippines. His account was
corroborated by Governor General Rafael Izquidero y Gutierrez, the governor-general
of the Philippine Islands at the time of the Mutiny. They stated that the mutiny was led
by a group of indigenous clergies.
d. Who was Carlos Maria de la Torre y Navacerrada?
❖ Mariano Gomes de los Angeles, often referred to by his original birth name Mariano Gomez de
los Angeles, was a Filipino Catholic priest, who was falsely accused of mutiny by the Spanish
colonial authorities in the Philippines in the 19th century.
❖ Jose Apolonio Burgos y Garcia was a Filipino Catholic priest, part of the GOMBURZA, a trio of
priests who were falsely accused of mutiny by the Spanish colonial authorities in the Philippines
in the 19th century.
h. Who was Fr. Jacinto Zamora?
❖ Jacinto Zamora y del Rosario was a Filipino priest, part of the GOMBURZA, a trio of priests who
were falsely accused of mutiny by the Spanish colonial authorities in the Philippines in the 19th
century.
❖ Francisco Zaldua had been the principal informer against the three priests. His statement had
been the main basis for the convictions, and he had been promised a pardon in exchange for
his testimony, however, he was condemned along with the three. He was the first to be
executed among them on February 17, 1872.
a. “Defense” (Filipino side)
A Response to Injustice: The Filipino Version of the Incident
❖ The Filipino version of the bloody incident in Cavite was written by Dr. Trinidad Hermenigildo Pardo de
Tavera, a Filipino scholar, and researcher. According to him, the incident was merely a mutiny by native
Filipino soldiers and laborers at the Cavite arsenal who were dissatisfied with the loss of their privileges.
Tavera indirectly blamed Gov. Izquierdo's cold-blooded policies, such as the elimination of privileges for
workers and native army members at the arsenal, and the prohibition on the establishment of schools of
arts and trades for Filipinos, which the general saw as a cover-up for the formation of a political club.
On January 20, 1872, about 200 soldiers, arsenal workers, and Cavite residents led by Sergeant Lamadrid
rose in arms and assassinated the commanding officer and all Spanish officers in sight. Unfortunately, the
insurgents did not receive support from most of the army. When word of the mutiny reached Manila,
Gen. Izquierdo immediately ordered reinforcements of Spanish troops in Cavite. The mutiny was officially
declared over after two days.
Tavera believed that the Spanish friars and Izquierdo used the Cavite Mutiny as a powerful lever to
overthrow the Spanish government in the Philippines by magnifying it as a full-fledged conspiracy
involving not only the native army but also residents of Cavite and Manila, and most importantly, the
native clergy. It is worth noting that at the time, the Central Government in Madrid declared its
intention to deprive the friars of all powers of intervention in matters of civil government as well as the
direction and management of educational institutions. According to Tavera, the friars' desperate desire
to maintain power in the Philippines prompted them to do something drastic.
Meanwhile, the Central Government of Spain welcomed an educational decree authored by
Segismundo Moret that promoted the merger of sectarian schools run by friars into a school called the
Philippine Institute. The decree proposed raising the standard of education in the Philippines by
requiring competitive examinations for teaching positions in such schools. Despite the native clergy's
enthusiasm for secularization, most Filipinos welcomed this improvement.
Fearing that their influence in the Philippines would dwindle, the friars exploited the incident and
presented it to the Spanish government as a vast conspiracy organized across the archipelago with the
goal of destroying Spanish sovereignty. Tavera confirmed that the Madrid government came to believe
that the scheme was true without investigating the true facts or the scope of the alleged "revolution"
reported by Izquierdo and the friars.
Convicted educated men who took part in the mutiny received life sentences, whereas members of the
native clergy led by the GOMBURZA were tried and executed by garrote. This episode precipitates the
rise of nationalism and, ultimately, the outbreak of the Philippine Revolution of 1896. The account of the
French writer Edmund Plauchut supplemented the account by confirming that the event occurred due
to discontent among the arsenal workers and soldiers in Cavite fort. The Frenchman, on the other hand,
focused on the execution of the three martyr priests, which he witnessed.
c. Governor-General Notes
❖ Izquierdo replaced Governor General Carlos Maria de la Torre some months before in 1871 and
immediately rescinded Torre’s liberal measures and imposed his iron-first rule. He was opposed to any
hint of reformist or nationalistic movements in the Philippines. He was in office for less than two years,
but they will be remembered for his cruelty to the Filipinos and the barbaric execution of the three
martyrs- priests blamed for the mutiny.
IV. Aftermath
a. “End of the Mutiny”
❖ In the immediate aftermath of the mutiny, some Filipino soldiers were disarmed and later sent into exile
on the southern island of Mindanao. Those suspected of directly supporting the mutineers were arrested
and executed. The mutiny was used by the colonial government and Spanish friars to implicate three
secular priests, Mariano Gómez, José Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora, collectively known as Gomburza. They
were executed by garrote in Luneta, also known in Tagalog as Bagumbayan, on February 17, 1872. These
executions, particularly those of the Gomburza, were to have a significant effect on people because of
the shadowy nature of the trials. José Rizal, whose brother Paciano was a close friend of Burgos,
dedicated his work, El filibusterismo, to these three priests.
On January 27, 1872, Governor-General Rafael Izquierdo approved the death sentences on forty-one of
the mutineers. On February 6, eleven more were sentenced to death, but these were later commuted to
life imprisonment. Others were exiled to other islands of the colonial Spanish East Indies such as Guam,
and the Mariana Islands, including the father of Pedro Paterno, Maximo Paterno, Antonio M. Regidor y
Jurado, and José María Basa. The most important group created a colony of Filipino expatriates in
Europe, particularly in the Spanish capital of Madrid and Barcelona, where they were able to create
small insurgent associations and print publications that were to advance the claims of the seeding
Philippine Revolution.
Finally, a decree was made, stating there were to be no further ordinations/appointments of Filipinos as
Roman Catholic parish priests. Despite the mutiny, the Spanish authorities continued to employ large
numbers of native Filipino troops, carabineros, and civil guards in their colonial forces through the 1870s-
1890s until the Spanish-American War of 1898.
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