The Cavite Mutiny: Toward A Definitive History
The Cavite Mutiny: Toward A Definitive History
The Cavite Mutiny: Toward A Definitive History
Philippine Studies, Volume 59, Number 1, March 2011, pp. 55-81 (Article)
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J o hn N . S chumacher , S . J .
I make known to you that, as I was informed this very night, in the
market here [Cavite] and in the walls [Intramuros] on Friday or
Saturday of this week they will fire a cannon shot in the fort of Manila,
the sign of a revolt against the Spaniards. They are taking this occasion
since the squadron is not here. The one who is acting as the head of the
revolt is the Very Reverend Father Burgos in Manila, and in Cavite the
artillery sergeants and the corporals of the native marines. (BNM, ms
13.228; in Tormo Sanz 1977, 70)
It may well be therefore that he reviewed the troops that night and thus
instilled in them fear that they had been discovered so that those committed
to the revolt held back. That is what happened with the 300 men of the
regiment no. 7 in Cavite who were pledged to the revolt. When the rebelling
marines and artillerymen invaded their barracks and called on them to join
them, their commander rallied them instead to drive the rebels out of the
barracks and send them back into Fort San Felipe. They would be the loyal
forces fighting the rebels through the night till the regiments from Manila
joined them (Izquierdo 1872b, 4–13; Carballo 1872, 6–8). Thus, all three
regiments, in Manila and in Cavite, remained loyal to Spain, and the men
expected from Bacoor were prevented from joining the rebels. Without those
forces, the mutiny was inevitably doomed, though the rebels held out in the
fort until it was taken by storm on 22 January.
I do not know what will come out of these judicial inquiries [in Manila]
and of those they are conducting in Cavite; but public opinion, impartial
persons, the evident proofs of moral character, the confidential
reports that I have had about those persons for some time, are all
motives for me of inner conviction that they alone are the authors
of the rebellion put down in Cavite. If their culpability is proved, the
verdict of the law will be inexorable with them. But if, as can happen,
given the circumstances of those who were deceived and seduced,
the abovementioned persons should not turn out to be guilty, I am
also ready to adopt with them a strong measure, their exile to the
Marianas. (Izquierdo 1872a)
Some conclusions may be drawn from this letter. First, that those priests
and laymen in custody had been arrested during the revolt, prior to any
evidence resulting from it. Second, that all were presumed to be guilty of
some complicity in the revolt and deserving of punishment. Third, that some
would receive capital punishment; the others would be punished by exile to
the Marianas. Fourth, that even those who were not proven guilty would
nonetheless be banished to the Marianas. A fifth, that would prove not to
be true, was that these were the only instigators of the revolt. In fact, in the
subsequent days others would be arrested. On 23 January Frs. José Guevara
and Mariano Sevilla were arrested, and on 25 January Bartolomé Serra, all
in Manila, according to reports of the civil governor (Artigas 1911, 159–61).
Others were arrested at different places and times, which do not appear in
the official records surviving.
Strangely, Fr. Jacinto Zamora’s name does not appear on Izquierdo’s
first list, in spite of the Jesuit report. But it seems this must have been mere
rumor. Artigas (1911, 148–49) has unconnected accounts. On the one hand,
he says that Zamora lived with Fr. Miguel de Laza. Since the latter was sick,
he did not allow that those who turned out to be Masons be condemned
to death . . . providing that those who were arrested in the beginning be
destined to the Peninsula or to Africa, to suffer the penalty imposed on
them . . . For this reason they destined to Ceuta and Cartagena Enrique
Paraíso, Crisanto Reyes, and Máximo Inocencio, all three Indios, the
first being a brother of the lodge of Pandacan, the two latter, of that
of Cavite. (ibid., 15)
If Regidor is correct, it means that these three men, except for the
intervention of Izquierdo, were condemned to death. Izquierdo instructed
the Inspector General of Penal Colonies in a letter accompanying them
to their prison: “to make sure that [they] were made to suffer the real and
effective punishment to which they had been sentenced, since they, their
accomplices, and families have been known to have contributed the most in
facilitating the mutiny” (Boncan 1995, 12; italics added).
Their ten-year sentence, the most severe exile, argues to it being a
commutation of the original death sentence, which those others judged
guilty of the revolt, the three priests and Zaldúa, were to receive.
Conclusions
From the facts narrated, we can draw some conclusions:
1. The revolt in Cavite was not a mere mutiny, but part of a planned
separatist revolution.
2. The revolution as a whole failed because of the defection of the
committed Filipino troops.
3. The planners of the revolution were Inocencio, de los Reyes, and
Paraíso.
One final point deserves to be discussed: how could the three planners
of the revolt have believed that it was possible to overthrow Spanish rule in
the Philippines? It is evident that their plans did not work out, and that the
revolt had no chance of succeeding once the three committed regiments
had remained loyal to Spain. But had the 300 men of regiment no. 7 joined
with the artillery and the marines, and had they been joined by the 500 men
under Camerino in Bacoor, there is every reason to think that they could
have taken control of Cavite, given the fact that most of the naval forces
were engaged in bombarding Jolo. Had the almost 800 men of regiment
nos. 1 and 2 (Izquierdo 1872b, 15) taken possession of Fort Santiago, as
planned, it is conceivable that they would take control of Manila. Writing
to Admiral Topete, the new head of government in Spain, shortly after the
revolt, Izquierdo recalled to him that in the whole country there were only
300 Spanish soldiers against 8,874 native Filipinos (Tormo 1973, 127). If the
regiments in Cavite and Manila had gained control of those key points, it was
not improbable that Filipino soldiers in other parts of the country might have
followed. One need only remember that in 1898, although the Americans
held Manila, the revolution in Cavite was followed by revolutionary forces
taking possession of the rest of the country, in spite of the fact that the many
thousands of Spanish soldiers very greatly outnumbered the 300 of 1872.
In the end, various factors doomed the revolt: (a) the regiments were
never really committed to the revolt; (b) the rallying of the regiments by
List of Abbreviations
AHN Archivo Histórico Nacional, Madrid
AHCJC Arxiu Històric de la Companiya de Jesús a Catalunya, Barcelona
(Formerly APTCJ, Sant Cugat del Vallès, Barcelona)
APTCJ Archivo de la Provincia de Tarragona de la Compañía de Jesús
Sant Cugat del Vallès, Barcelona (now AHCJC).
BAH Biblioteca de la Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid
BNM Biblioteca Nacional, Madrid
PNA Philippine National Archives, Manila
SHM Servicio Histórico Militar, Madrid
Notes
1 Although Artigas does not say explicitly where he found these records, and only quotes from
them, other primary documents in his book later became part of the PNA. If he really had the
full records of the interrogations, it is puzzling why he did not make more use of them in his book.
Perhaps he found only a few pages, somehow separated from the full records. Tormo (1977, 72 n.
218) quotes a draft letter of Izquierdo, sending the original judicial proceedings to the Overseas
Minister. By implication, since the delay was due to making a copy, this copy remained in Manila.
2 Although using Octavo’s interrogation and confession ([Octavo] 1872), I considered it probable
that some of the account was obtained by threats (Schumacher 1981, 26–27). Corpuz expresses
a similar skepticism (Artigas 1996, xii). However, a more careful reading of the account makes
clear that Octavo professed ignorance to many leading questions put to him with the intention of
confirming the correctness of the sentences passed months earlier, disappointing his interrogators.
3 Artigas (1911, 111) flatly denies this assertion. Montero y Vidal’s (1895, 573 n. 2) footnote
affirming it contains one of his folkloric tales.
4 Antonio Regidor would identify this friar as a lay brother, Friar Antonio Rufián, and claim that he
was forced by the mutineers to remain in the fort to hear their confessions in case of necessity
(Vergara 1896, 14–15). In fact, Rufián was a priest, not a lay brother, and it is not even certain that
he was in the Philippines at the time (Tormo 1978, 340–42). The friar may not have been Rufián
after all, and it may be one more case of Regidor hitting upon familiar names to fit his versions of
the facts. See Schumacher 1991, 74–77.
5 Guevara’s name must have been a mistake, since the report of the civil governor of Manila for
23 January lists his arrest together with that of Fr. Mariano Sevilla (Artigas 1911, 159–61). For
Zamora, see below.
6 Artigas (1911, 115–17) erroneously gives the date of 21 January for all these arrests.
7 This junta or club (the words are Izquierdo’s) was named by Artigas the comité de reformadores.
None of those names seems to have been used by the members, whose identity besides is
controverted. In any case, “it was doubtful whether this group had any formal organization”
(Manuel 1970, 2:48), though Antonio Regidor would speak of a meeting and voting (n. 15 below).
8 However, if we are to believe Regidor (1900, 74), Burgos “helped toward the founding of El Eco
Filipino.” This is said merely in passing, giving no indication of how he might have done so. It is
difficult to reconcile this with Burgos’s known relationship with Manuel Regidor and El Correo de
España.
9 Montero y Vidal (1895, 3:577 n. 2) relates that Lamadrid had made the remark about both rectors
of San Pedro parish, thus including Zamora.
10 Although Buencamino, who was a contemporary and key figure of the affiliated Juventud Escolar
Liberal, includes various laymen who were not the object of investigation in 1872, his enumeration
of the priests coincides with those executed or exiled and includes Zamora.
11 There were such men in Bacoor, but it is not clear that they were actually 500 in number. Elsewhere
in the same letter Izquierdo (1872b, 55, 18) speaks of 400 coming from Bacoor toward Kawit.
12 I owe a copy of the original with all its signatures to Dr. Roberto Blanco Andrés to whom I am
exceedingly grateful. An unsigned copy of this memorial was published in Schumacher 1999,
214–37. I found it in AHN leg. 2255, exp. 2, where it is with a letter of the archbishop to the regent
of Spain, Marshal Francisco Serrano, dated 31 Dec. 1870. It thus appears that the archbishop
had a copy of the clergy memorial prior to its signing, whose purpose he supported in his own
letter. Plauchut (1877/1972, 42) erroneously claimed that this document, supposedly with 300
signatures, was formulated as an act of loyalty to Spain, drawn up by Burgos at the persuasion of
the archbishop.
13 The dates of these letters are known from supplementary information provided by Tormo 1977, 48
n. 131.
14 For the correct spelling of Gómez’s name, see Schumacher 2006, 252–53 n. 88.
15 Antonio Regidor (1900, 74) knew of Gómez’s refusal to sign: “he refused to sign it and [refused]
to give his opinion.” Regidor claimed that he himself and Fathers Laza and Mendoza, with other
laymen, voted against the idea. But, in fact, the two priests did sign (AHN 1871a).
17 After all of both groups were in exile, Labra and Manuel Regidor would act on behalf of Basa also.
See Artigas 1911, 242–61.
18 In a later joint petition, Paterno’s lawyer would simply say that no proof of the existence of such
a newspaper had been offered (Artigas 1911, 249). Clearly the authorities had confused the name
of the newspaper.
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