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  2. School of Dr. Jose P. Rizal Site and Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_of_Dr._Jose_P...

    The School of Dr. Jose P. Rizal Site and Museum showcases the early life of Rizal as a student. It was opened in 2016 and renovated in 2021. [2] [3]The museum also hosts a historical marker that the Philippines Historical Committee, now the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, was installed on the site in 1948.

  3. José Rizal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/José_Rizal

    In 1901, the American Governor General William Howard Taft suggested that the U.S.-sponsored Philippine Commission name Rizal a national hero for Filipinos. Jose Rizal was an ideal candidate, favourable to the American occupiers since he was dead, and non-violent, a favourable quality which, if emulated by Filipinos, would not threaten the ...

  4. Sa Aking Mga Kabata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sa_Aking_Mga_Kabata

    Although Rizal's native tongue was Tagalog, his early education was all in Spanish. In the oft-quoted anecdote of the moth and the flame from Rizal's memoir, the children's book he and his mother were reading was entitled El Amigo de los Niños, and it was in Spanish. [11] He would later lament his difficulties in expressing himself in Tagalog.

  5. Teodora Alonso Realonda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teodora_Alonso_Realonda

    Teodora Alonso Realonda y Quintos (November 9, 1827 – August 16, 1911) was a wealthy woman in the Spanish colonial Philippines.She was best known as the mother of the Philippines' national hero Jose Rizal.

  6. Ilustrado - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilustrado

    The most prominent ilustrados were Graciano López Jaena, Marcelo H. del Pilar, Mariano Ponce, Antonio Luna and José Rizal, the Philippine national hero. Rizal's novels Noli Me Tangere ("Touch Me Not") and El Filibusterismo ("The Subversive") "exposed to the world the injustices imposed on Filipinos under the Spanish colonial regime". [9] [11]

  7. Austin Craig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin_Craig

    He was the holder of the Rizal professorial chair at the University of the Philippines in Padre Faura from 1912 to 1922. This chair was awarded him in recognition of his books on Rizal, the first being The Story of Jose Rizal , 1909, followed Lineage, Life and Labor of Jose Rizal, Philippine Patriot: A Study of the Growth of Free Ideas in the ...

  8. Carlos Quirino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_Quirino

    Known for his early biography of Jose Rizal entitled "The Great Malayan" (1940), [3] [2] he also wrote several works on Philippine history, as well as biographies of President Manuel Quezon and the painter Damian Domingo. [1] Carlos Quirino joined the Philippine Army and became second lieutenant before the outbreak of World War II.

  9. Máximo Viola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Máximo_Viola

    Rizal experienced financial constraints in getting his novel Noli me Tangere published and considered destroying the manuscript of the book. Viola financed the publication of the first 2000 copies of the novel in 1887, and was later given the galley proof and the first published copy of the novel by Rizal.