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Casa Tribunal de Malolos Built between 1740-1780, it was originally the house of a wealthy sugar and tobacco baron, Don Felipe Vasquez, and used as the Second Municipal Hall of Malolos in 1859. It was converted into a jailhouse during the First Philippine Republic in 1898
Built in 1580 as Casa Tribunal,became Casa Real of Bulacan Province in 1901. Paseo del Congreso cor. Bank of Commerce Rd., Malolos City: Filipino June 11, 1990 Church of Barasoain: Building House of Worship, NHCP Museum Site of Malolos Congress 1898, Inauguration of the First Philippine Republic 1899, Site of Universidad Literaria de Filipina
Malolos [maˈlɔlɔs], officially the City of Malolos (Filipino: Lungsod ng Malolos), is a component city and capital of the province of Bulacan, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 261,189 people. [3] It is the capital city of the province of Bulacan as the seat of the provincial government. [5]
On October 12, 2016, the museum was relocated to the Casa Real Shrine, Malolos. [1] The museum contains relics from the First Philippine Republic, memorabilia of General Emilio Aguinaldo, relics from the wealthy families of Malolos, exhibits, a printing press of the Malolos Republic, and a display of the 21 Women of Malolos memorabilia. [2]
In that same year, Malolos Curate and Vicar Forane Fray Agustín Carreno, OSA established the first chapel at the old Ermita of the old Cemetery of Malolos. Abandoned in 1680, it served as the temporary chapel-of-ease of Barásoain, located in front of the Casa Tribunal (Presidencia), which is now commonly called Casa Real de Malolos. A fire in ...
On February 27, 1901, the Philippine Commission officially transferred the seat of government to Malolos, and the Casa Real de Malolos was the seat of the Provincial Governor from 1900 to 1930 until the completion of the capitol building at Guinhawa, Malolos.
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A constituted branch of the Katipunan was established in Polo on February 1, 1896. [25] The town joined other revolutionaries when the Philippine Revolution broke out in August 1896, while Valenzuela availed the amnesty offered by Spanish authorities few weeks later. [26]