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Prior to the Palaris' revolt, an earlier revolt in 1660 started under the leadership of Andres Malong, who declared himself King of Pangasinan. The revolt would end with Malong's surrender by late January 1661.
Andres Malong, a native chief of the town of Binalatongan (now named San Carlos City), liberated the province from Spanish rule in December 1660. The people of Pangasinan proclaimed Andres Malong Ari na Pangasinan ("King of Pangasinan"). Pangasinan armies attempted to liberate the neighboring provinces of Pampanga and Ilocos, but were repelled ...
Palaris' revolt became known as the second wave of the Pangasinenses resistance against Spain (first wave was initiated by Andres Malong decades earlier). The lore of the Amputi Layag that came to be known across Pangasinan was revived by Palaris (Malong started the first revolt that culminated in the first Amputi Layag resistance).
Andres Malong [14] was the maestro de campo of Binalatongan - now San Carlos City - in Pangasinan in the 1660s. [15] He assisted many Spaniards in governing different towns in Pangasinan, and as such, had learned and was trained to use force and cruelty.
Free Pangasinan Name Image From Until Notes Andres Malong: 1660: 1661: a Filipino revolutionary leader who conspired to overthrow Spanish rule in the northern Philippines and establish an independent Pangasinense nation in Pangasinan, with him as "King of Pangasinan."
During the mid Spanish period, Binalatongan was well known as a site of many rebellions within Pangasinan, which included the revolts of Don Andres Malong (1660) and Juan de la Cruz Palaris (1762) during the Seven Years’ War. [4]
In 1660, Andres Malong, a leader from Binalatongan (San Carlos), Pangasinan, initiated a rebellion against Spanish colonial rule, declaring himself "King of Pangasinan." Malong allied with Sambal and Negritos forces and sought the support of neighboring provinces of Pampanga, Cagayan and Ilocos, urging them to join his cause against the Spanish ...
In 1660, a revolt led by Andres Malong, and later another insurrection in 1762 headed by Juan dela Cruz Palaris, culminated in humiliating defeats for the Spanish colonial forces. These uprisings prompted King Carlos III of Spain to order the destruction of Binalatongan. Following this directive, the town was razed and subsequently renamed San ...