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  1. Felipe Buencamino y Siojo (August 23, 1848 – February 6, 1929) was an infamous Filipino turncoat, lawyer, diplomat, and politician. He fought alongside the Spaniards in the Philippine Revolution but later switched sides and joined Emilio Aguinaldo's revolutionary cabinet.

  2. Apr 1, 2022 · Felipe Buencamino There might have been many turncoats and balimbings during the Philippine-American War, but only a few can arguably match the temerity of Felipe Buencamino. As a judge for the Spanish government, he had once written to a governor-general exhorting “death to the traitors who disturb our public peace and ...

  3. Felipe Buencamino. August 23, 1848 -February 6, 1929. A ccounts about Felipe Buencamino (Sr) in Philippine history describe him quite harshly for shifting allegiance too quickly and then managing to obtain favor and positions of power and authority. .

  4. Family and Death. After his first wife died in 1883, Buencamino married Guadalupe Salazar Abreu, with whom he had three sons: Victor, Felipe Jr., and Philip. He also had 10 children with his first wife, Juana Arnedo. Felipe Buencamino passed away on February 6, 1929. Source: Felipe Buencamino - Wikiwand, https://www.wikiwand.com.

  5. Si Felipe Siojo Buencamino Sr. (Agosto 23, 1848 – Pebrero 6, 1929) ay isang Pilipinong abogado, pinuno sa himagsikan, politiko, gabinete noong Unang Republika ng Pilipinas, at isa sa nagtatag ng Iglesia Filipina Independiente.

  6. Felipe Buencamino y Siojo (August 23, 1848 – February 6, 1929) was an infamous Filipino turncoat, lawyer, diplomat, and politician. He fought alongside the Spaniards in the Philippine Revolution but later switched sides and joined Emilio Aguinaldo 's revolutionary cabinet.

  7. Feb 7, 2006 · Today, February 7, 1891, Felipe Buencamino, Sr. informs Dr. Jose Rizal of the status of the dispute with the Dominican over the Calamba state. A notorious invisible government existed in...

  8. May 12, 2024 · Felipe Siojo Buencamino Sr. was a lawyer by profession, a revolutionary leader, a statesman, a cabinet secretary during the First Philippine Republic and was one of the founders of the Philippine Independent Church.

  9. For the social historian of the war, Buencamino provides day-to-day descriptions of what was happening in the places where he went: evacua- tion centers, frontlines, Corregidor, Manila, and the Military Intelligence Service (MIS) headquarters in Bataan. Repeated throughout the text and the subject of much discussion is "convoy" (6 and passim).

  10. Description. Reconstructed diary (the original was burned when Bataan surrendered) of a promising young Filipino who was an Ateneo law student. Called to active duty with the USAFFE, Philip (as he was known to his friends) became aide de camp to Gen. Simon de Jesus of the Philippine Army’s intelligence service.