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The Tejeros Convention (Spanish: Convención de Tejeros; Tagalog: Kapulungan sa Tejeros), also referred to as the Tejeros Assembly or Tejeros Congress, was a meeting held on March 22, 1897, in San Francisco de Malabon, Cavite (now General Trias). This gathering brought together factions of the Katipunan, namely Magdiwang and Magdalo, and led to ...
The Acta de Tejeros was a document prepared on March 23, 1897 which proclaimed the events at the Tejeros Convention on March 22 to have been disorderly and tarnished by chicanery. Signatories to this petition rejected the insurgent government instituted at the convention and affirmed their steadfast devotion to the ideals of the Katipunan.
The Naic Military Agreement was a document prepared on April 18, 1897, [1] in which a number of participants in the Tejeros Convention repudiated the convention results. This repudiation, which followed the Acta de Tejeros issued on March 23, would later cost Andres Bonifacio his life.
Mariano Trías y Closas (Spanish: [ˈmaˈɾjano ˈtɾiˈas] : October 12, 1868 – January 22, 1914) is considered to be the first de facto Philippine Vice President of that revolutionary government established at the Tejeros Convention - an assembly of Philippine revolutionary leaders that elected officials of the revolutionary movement against the colonial government of Spain.
Tirona was present at the Tejeros Convention on March 22, 1897, wherein Bonifacio and leaders of the Magdalo and Magdiwang met to settle the issue of leadership of the revolution. [17] Bonifacio presided over the elections that followed, despite his misgivings over the lack of representation by other provinces. [18] Tirona helped distribute the ...
Casa Hacienda and its Environs (Site of the Tejeros Convention) Former site of the Augustinian Estate House; Site of the historic March 22, 1897 Tejeros Convention: Cavite: Rosario: General Trias Drive
Had Licerio Topacio, instead of Aguinaldo, been nominated in the Tejeros Convention, the chances were that he might have been decisely beaten by a younger and more famous man, Andres Bonifacio, the Katipunan Supremo. Of course, with such an outcome “history would have been taken a different course," as claimed by biographer Gwekoh.
The Assembly elected a number of cabinet officials, including Pascual Alvarez as the Secretary of the Interior (after its first elected secretary, Andres Bonifacio, did not assume the post in protest of the Tejeros Convention results), Baldomero Aguinaldo as Secretary of Finance, Jacinto Lumbreras as Secretary of State;, Severino de las Alas as ...