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Scene from Ang Kababaihan ng Malolos (2014), filmed in the Uitangcoy-Santos ancestral house. In 2010, the house of Alberta Uitangcoy was declared a national heritage house by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines. [39] It houses the Museo ng mga Kababaihan ng Malolos (English: Malolos Women's Museum). [40] [41]
Marina was the daughter of José Dizon, one of the Thirteen Martyrs of Bagumbayan, and Roberta Bartolomé, who died when Marina was only eight years old.After her mother's death, her aunt, Josefa Dizon, mother of Emilio Jacinto, took care of her.
The Uitangcoy-Santos House (also known as the Museum of the Women of Malolos) is an early 20th-Century bay-na-bato structure along FT Reyes Street (formerly known as Calle Electricidad) in Barangay Sto.
Teresa Magbanua y Ferraris (October 13, 1868 – August 1947), better known as Teresa Magbanua and dubbed as the "Visayan Joan of Arc", was a Filipino schoolteacher and military leader.
Filipina Comfort Women was a statue publicly displayed along Baywalk, Roxas Boulevard in Manila.Unveiled on December 8, 2017 and installed through the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) and other donors and foundations, it was dedicated to the Filipino "comfort women", who worked in military brothels in World War II including those who were coerced into doing so.
colegio de sta. rosa unang nakilala sa pangalang beaterio y casa de enseÑanza.ito ay itinatag ni madre paula de la santisima trinidad sa intramuros noong 1750 upang ang mga batang pilipina ay mabigyan ng karunungan at kaalamang makakristiyano at turuan ang mga ito ng mga gawaing pantahanan para sa kanilang ipagiging mabubuting mamamayan.
Tecson was born in San Miguel de Mayumo, Bulacan, one of sixteen children of Rafael Tecson and Monica Perez. [4] She learned to read and write from schoolmaster Quinto. She practiced fencing with Juan Zeto and was feared throughout the province, called "Tangkad" (tall) by her peers.
Maria Lorena Morelos Barros (March 18, 1948 – March 24, 1976) was a Filipino activist. She founded the Malayang Kilusan ng Bagong Kababaihan (Free Movement of New Women) or MAKIBAKA, a militant women's organization shortly before the Martial Law. [1]