KAS 1: FINALS TGBTG
Plus Ultra
"further beyond" - Charles V motto and phrase that represents reaching into the new world and into the further beyond
Juan de Salcedo
"the last of the Conquistadores." In May 1572, Salcedo led an exploration expedition of 45 Spaniards northward
Enconmendia
'encomendar' (to trust); form of grant; given by Spanish King to meritorious Spaniards to have authority over parts of land; granted authority to control land;
La Immaculada Concepcion
1859; upon the return of Jesuits from expulsion
Ateneo Municipalidad de Manila
1865/from La Immaculada
boys/girls
2 primary schools for ages 6-15 y/o
2 in Mexico; 2 in Manila
4 ships in Pacific
Search for the returned route
After Magellan's death, the survivors, in two ships, sailed on to the Moluccas and loaded the hulls with spice. One ship attempted, unsuccessfully, to return across the Pacific.
1. Alcalde Ordinario 2. Regidores (councilor) 3. Escribado (scribes) 4. Alguacil Mayor (chief constable of audiencia)
Ayuntamiento
July 17, 1550
Charles V issued a decree: mandating Spanish Colonies to establish schools
Rey De Espana
Civil and Spiritual Authority (through Royal Patronage)
Colegio de Nuestra Senora del Santissimo Rosario
College of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary; Dominican Univ; Royal and Pontifical UST (1611)
Conseho de Indios/Ministerio de ultramar
Composed of 6 to 10 appointed royal councilors Governed all the Spanish colonies in the King's name, and had legislative power Served as the court of appeals for the colonies
Magellan's Route
Discovered the Strait of Magellan and became the first European to cross the Pacific Ocean; using this route, they can go back to their own countries; can't cross South East Asia
1863
Educational degree; free, compulsory, publicly supported (system of educ); even before Americans arrived, Spaniards already planned to establish a public institution
1. Corregimientos 2. Real Audiencia 3. Alcaldia (Gobernadorcillo/Cabeza de Barangay)
Governador y Capitan General
Viceroy de Nueva Espana
Governed New Spain on the King's behalf
Juan de Plasencia
He was among the first group of Franciscan missionaries who arrived in the Islands on July 2, 1578
yo ebedezco pero no se cumple
I obey but do not carry out
Philippines
Indirect colonization; indirectly governed through a representative (Governador y Capitan General)
Governador y Capitan General
Initially exercised executive (as Governor), legislative, judicial (as President of the Audiencia), military (as Captain General), and ecclesiastical (as Vice Patron) powers By 1821 or 1875, the office became Governor General Appointed by the King with the advice of the council and probably the Viceroy prior to 1821 Balanced by the Audiencia
Remontados,ladrones monteses,cimarrones,and tulisanes
Kinds of Filipinos who resisted Christianity; system of plaza complex
Padrones
Labor agents who greeted immigrants and often exploited them; held by Cabeso de Barangay
1570-1571
Miguel Lopez de Legazpi sent Martin de Goiti and Capt. Juan de Salcedo on a reconnaissance trip to the island of Luzon and a thriving port town called Maynilad. On May 24, 1570, Goiti fired a cannon as a signal to another Spanish vessel in Manila Bay. But the local ruler, Rajah Sulayman, considered it a hostile act and called his warriors to battle, resulting in the defeat of Sulayman and burning of Maynilad
Legazpi's route
Northwards; Kurushio Current (catch the current); skipped islands (not able to discover islands like Hawaii);used for trading of the galleon
las Filipinas
Philippines
Encomienda De Particulares
Private; Captain, Jorge de Villalobos
1. lack of competent teachers 2. lack of textbooks 3. lack of facilities
Reasons for the Failure of Spanish Public School System
Reduccion
Resettlement policy of the Spaniards
Palacio del Gobernador
Residence and office of the governor general
1572
Route, ships--trade to Mexico; established Manila--Acapulco Trade (Galleon Trade)
La Insigne y siempre leal ciudad
Spain's Manila (1571-1898); In 1571, Manila became Spanish territory and the work of building up the main settlement began. On 24 June 1571, Miguel López de Legazpi declared Manila as a new capital for the Spanish colony in the Far East.
1. peninsulares 2. insulares 3. prinicipalia 4. indios 5. chinos
Spanish Colonial Caste (?)
1. Rey De Espana 2. Conseho de Indios/Ministerio de ultramar 3. Viceroy de Nueva Espana 4. Governador y Capitan General
Spanish Colonial Structure
Intramuros
Spanish Manila
Colegio de Santa Isabel
Spanish girls
1. Establishment of the Diocese of Manila 2. Abuses of the Colonizers in the first decade 3. Method in converting the natives
Synod of Manila Objectives; Juan de Plasencia
Reduccion
The grouping and resuction in number of formerly scattered barangays into compact and larger communities to facilitate religious conversion and cultural change.
Galleon Trade
When the Spaniards came to the Philippines, our ancestors were already trading with China, Japan, Siam, India, Cambodia, Borneo and the Moluccas. The Spanish government continued trade relations with these countries, and the Manila became the center of commerce in the East. The Spaniards closed the ports of Manila to all countries except Mexico. Thus, the Manila-Acapulco Trade, better known as the "Galleon Trade" was born. The Galleon Trade was a government monopoly. Only two galleons were used: One sailed from Acapulco to Manila with some 500,000 pesos worth of goods, spending 120 days at sea; the other sailed from Manila to Acapulco with some 250,000 pesos worth of goods spending 90 days at sea.
Roy Lopez de Villalobos
a Spanish explorer who sailed the Pacific from Mexico to establish a permanent foothold for Spain in the East Indies, which was near the Line of Demarcation between Spain and Portugal according to the Treaty of Zaragoza in 1529.
Enconmendia
a labor system instituted by the Spanish crown in the American colonies. In this system, a Spanish encomendero was granted a number of native laborers who would pay tributes to him in exchange for his protection.
Tuba
alcoholic beverage; entered the Mexican dictionary
Treaty of Zaragosa
also referred to as the Capitulation of Zaragoza, was a peace treaty between Castile and Portugal, signed on 22 April 1529 by King John III and the Emperor Charles V, in the Aragonese city of Zaragoza. The treaty defined the areas of Castilian and Portuguese influence in Asia, in order to resolve the "Moluccas issue", which had arisen because both kingdoms claimed the Moluccas islands for themselves, asserting that it was within their area of influence established by the Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494.
Mapa de Almas
by parish priest; list of members, confession, contribution
Spanish Colonial Structure
centralized Spanish Gov
Cabildo
city council; first appointment (June 24 1572)
Synod of Manila
congregation of religious people; first bishop; A synod is a council assembled by the church wherein they decide matters of doctrine, administration, or application; 1582
Encomienda De La Real Corona
crown colony
Repartimiento System
divide, allot, assign; organize the society; division based on work (polo y servicios); division based on land (enconmendia)
Polo y Servicios
drafting of laborers; Filipino/Chinese Mestizos (16-60 y/o); obligated to render personal service to comm. projects [construction of galleons]; 40 days reduced to 15 days
1. son of head of brgy 2. terminal sickness 3. pwd 4. those who pay falla (absence) 5. students
exemptions
Beaterios
for rich girls; 1719; Compania de Jesus
1815
formal abolishment of Galleon trade; establishment of Real Compania de Filipinas(direct relation between PH and Spain)
Escuele Pia
geared for the poor boys
Plan General Economico
general economic plan; JOse Vasco y Vargas; Monopoly
1. spice 2. jewelry 3. silk 4. cotton 5. porcelain
goods collected
silk
goods that enter Mexico from Spain/China
Plaza Complex
grid pattern of streets with the main plaza at the center surrounded by the church, the tribunal, other government buildings, and the marketplace; public open space
Manila
had no Gobernadorcillo because of the Governador y Capitan General
Alcaldia
headed by Alcalde Mayor; can engage in trade; indulto de comercio (prone to abuse); abolished in the 19th century
Visita
headed by Visitador General
1. confiscation of property 2. heavy fine 3. imprisonment
if one is found guilty of misconduct
1864-1865
immaculada-Ateneo/Ayutamiento-Colegio de Ninas
exchange of culture
inclusion of trading products
Residencia
judicial review; Juez de Recidencia; abolished in the 19th century; Cadiz Consti (1812)
Boleta
license to Trade
1. reduced ships 2. clearance of port
limitations in entering Mexico (1 in Mexico, 1 in Manila)
Alcalde Mayor
local official during the Spanish period; acted as judge and handled local affairs
Entradas
military; 8 reales in kind/cash (ivory, silk, porcelain, cotton, abaca ,pina fiber, slaves, wine
1. Rowers of Galleon 2. cutting of logs
most hated work
Kolehiyo de San El de Fonso
oldest univ; expelled in 1559; too close to the pope
Battle of Bangkusay
on June 3, 1571, was a naval engagement that marked the last resistance by locals to the Spanish Empire's occupation and colonization of the Pasig River delta, which had been the site of the indigenous polities of Maynila and Tondo
Residenciado
one being judged
Martin de Goiti
one of the soldiers who accompanied the Spanish colonization of the East Indies and the Pacific, in 1565.
encomendero
pacificadores; head of enconmenda; entrusted to encomendado; assist friars; collect tributes
1. enconmienda 2. alcaldia 3. hacienda
political changes
Opium Monopoly
poppy plant; extract white substance; collected; polvorized; made intro balls for medicinal purposes; depressant; 19th century; mass production because of world commerce; infux of Chinese migrants; prohibition in 1814 (moral use, economic use) to maintain economy; contratista (every 3 years); Spanish benefits;
Vice Real Patron
power over Ecclesiastical appointments
Governador y Capitan General
president of audiencia;vicereal patron; supervise missionary works; commanding chief of army and navy; can veto laws
Colegio de Ninas
primary municipal girls school; 1864; ayutamiento de Manila
1759
problems in operation; Jesuit suppression (meddling with the state affairs)
1. cocoa 2. camachile 3. black nazarene 4. tianquitzli (change)
products shipped to Manila
limpieza de sangre
purity of blood
1. conservatism 2. practical
reasons for exclusivity
reduccir
reduccion plan
The Tobacco Monopoly
refers to the 1782 economic program of Spanish Governor General Jose V. Basco, in which tobacco production in the Philippines was under total control of the government
bajo elson dela campana
resettle under the sound of church bells;tame reluctant Filipinos through indoctrination (corregir)
Indulto de Comercio
right to engage in trade
Justicia y Instruccion
social order(governance)
Colegio de Ninos
sons of native ruling elite; 1596; replaced by Colegio de Manila; lasted 5 years
Domingo de Salazar
the first bishop of the Philippines, alarmed by reports from Filipinos themselves on the abuses they were suffering at the hands of Spanish officials and soldiers, convoked what has come to be known as the first Synod of Manila.
Ayuntamiento/cabildo
the general term for the town council, or cabildo, of a municipality or, sometimes, as is often the case in Spain and Latin America, for the municipality itself.
La Tornaruelta Viage
the returned route; next 250 years
corregir
to correct;discipline
Gobernadorcillo
town mayor; highest position given to a Filipino; election/appointment; Filipino/25 yrs+/literate in Spanish/Cabeza de Brgy experience
Pueblos
towns; headed by Gobernadorcillo (petty governor)
Corregimientos
unpacified zones; some places need correction; headed by Corregidor Military Governor (corrector)
a la ley se acata, pero no se compleu
we severe the law but don't carry it out
lower prices
why China is more preferable
situado real
will be given to Spanish gov