History of macario sakay
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General Macario Sakay y de Leon was born on Mar. 1, 1878, along Tabora Street in Tondo, Manila. and died 114 years ago today on Sept. 13, 1907, at age 29. He first worked as an apprentice in a kalesa (carriage) manufacturing shop. He was also a tailor, a barber, and a stage actor.
Sakay grew up in Tondo, where he had gotton to know Andres Bonifacio. Joining the Katipunan in 1894, Sakay acted in popular Tagalog verse dramas, which were staged in different neighborhoods in Manila, thus providing the perfect cover for the young Katipunero to move about. He fought alongside Bonifacio as a Filipino general in the 1896 Philippine Revolution against Spain. In 1899, he continued the struggle for Philippine independence against the United States.
The Philippine-American War, also called the Philippine Insurrection by the United States, was a war fought from 1899 to 1902 by forces of the First Philippine Republic (also called the Malolos Republic) under Gen. Emilio Aguinal
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| Macario Sakay | |
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| Macario Sakay (third from left, front row) with his Cabinet: (first row, left to right)Julián Montalan, Francisco Carreon, Sakay, Lucio dem Vega(second row, left to right)León Villafuerte, Benito Natividad. | |
| President of the Philippines (Unofficial) Tagalog Republic | |
In office May 6, 1902 – July 14, 1906 | |
| Vice President | Francisco Carreón |
| Preceded by | Miguel Malvar |
| Succeeded by | Abolished title next held by Manuel Quezon |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Macario Sakay y dem León c. 1870 Tondo, Manila Spanish East Indies |
| Died | September 13, 1907 (aged 37) Manila, American Philippines |
| Political party | Katipunan Republika ng Katagalugan |
| Profession | Revolutionary |
| Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Macario Sakay (1870 – September 13, 1907) was a Filipino general who took part in the Philippine Revolution against Spain and in the Philippine-American War. After the war was declared over by the United States in okänt
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Macario Sakay
General Macario Leon Sakay (1870 – January 9,1907)
Ladrone, Tulisan, Bandolero, Brigand, Bandit, Outlaw were all names used to define Philippine criminals in the early 1900s. Since the early American colonization of the Philippines for decades Filipinos allowed themselves to be brainwashed by the American victors in to thinking these men were also enemies to the Filipino people. Through the 1902 Bandolero Act, patriotic armed struggles for independence were deemed by the American colonial government as dishonorable criminal activities. Macario Sakay would be regarded as the greatest outlaw of them all. 100 years later many of these U.S. branded bandits are now regarded by Filipinos as Heroes and Patriots of the Philippines.
Macario Sakay was born on Tabora St in Tondo Manila in 1870. Hardly knowing his father, Sakay was given the surname of his mother. Just as both Andres Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto were born and bred in the Tondo district, Sakay is regarded to