Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  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 tranquillity.”

  3. He was a lawyer, diplomat, and politician, known for his controversial actions during the Philippine Revolution. (Felipe Buencamino) Early Life and Education. Born on August 23, 1848 in San Miguel, Bulacan to Victor Buencamino and Petrona Siojo, Felipe Buencamino was a bright student who pursued his education at the University of Santo Tomas.

  4. 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.

  5. About the author: Felipe Buencamino III (March 28,1920 — April 28,1949), popularly known as Phillip Buencamino III, ABPL’39, admitted to the bar, March 31, 1948. College debater, served in Bataan, postwar print and radio reporter, and diplomat in the Philippine Foreign Service.

  6. Felipe Buencamino y Siojo 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. part of the old aristocracy, whose patriarch, Felipe Buencamino, became prominent in national history as one of the leading members of the Malolos Congress. However, coming from an officer who served in Bataan, the dia- ries themselves are important as they shed light on the unexplored aspects of the Japanese occupation.

  8. The following excerpt is from the wartime diary of Felipe Buencamino III, recounting his experience on the Bataan Death March and as a prisoner of war at Camp O’Donnell.

  9. Memoirs and Diaries of Felipe Buencamino III, 1941-1944 by Felipe Buencamino III. Erwin S. Fernandez. Full Text: PDF. Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints is published by the Ateneo de Manila University. ISSN: 2244-1093 (Print) ISSN: 2244-1638 (Online)

  10. Sep 24, 2015 · For on the very day of the assassination, Felipe Buencamino, the Secretary of Development in Aguinaldo’s cabinet and a Luna foe, says that the President had left Cabanatuan for Tarlac.

  1. People also search for