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Felipe Agoncillo. His legacy as the first Filipino diplomat. Don Felipe Agoncillo y Encarnación (May 26, 1859 – September 29, 1941) was the Filipino lawyer representative to the negotiations in Paris that led to the Treaty of Paris (1898), ending the Spanish–American War and achieving him the title of " outstanding first Filipino diplomat ...
The Agoncillo–Mariño House is an old Spanish Colonial Era house in Taal, Batangas, Philippines.The house is one of the national shrines under the administration of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) with the purpose of memorializing the contribution of Marcela Mariño de Agoncillo in making the national flag of the Philippines and the deeds and ideals of Felipe ...
She was twenty years old then, while Don.Pablo was 58 years old. With her, he had five children. Beginning public life early, he was a municipal councilor for two terms, in 1903-1909, of his native town of Bacolor, with the late Fil-American War hero Felix Galura y Napao, as Municipal Mayor. Don Felix was the father of Manuel Galura.
6 (incl. Lorenza Agoncillo) Doña Marcela Mariño de Agoncillo (née Mariño y Coronel; June 24, 1859 – May 30, 1946) [1][2][3] was a Filipina who was the principal seamstress of the first and official flag of the Philippines, [4] gaining her the title of "The Mother of the Philippine Flag." Marcela Coronel Mariño was the daughter of Don ...
Agoncillo was born in Lemery, Batangas to Pedro Agoncillo and Feliza Andal, who both came from landed families in the province. Through his father, Agoncillo is related to Don Felipe Agoncillo, the Filipino diplomat who represented the Philippines in the negotiations that led to the Treaty of Paris (1898), [1] and Doña Marcela Agoncillo, one of the principal seamstress of the Philippine flag.
His tutors in this institution were: Francisco de Loyola, Augustinian prior and cofounder, in 1559, of the Monastery of Saint Augustine in Cuzco —Loyola stated that young Juan was "an exceptional prowess, and also very virtuous" [1] —; Juan de Cárdenas y Céspedes, famous dean of the Seminary of Saint Anthony the Abbot in Cuzco (from 1632 ...
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José de Espronceda. José Ignacio Javier Oriol Encarnación de Espronceda y Delgado (25 March 1808 – 23 May 1842) [2] was a Romantic Spanish poet, one of the most representative authors of the 19th century. [3] He was influenced by Eugenio de Ochoa, Federico Madrazo, Alfred Tennyson, Richard Chenevix Trench and Diego de Alvear. [4]