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  1. www.gintongaral.com › mga-bayani › pedro-paternoPedro Paterno - Gintong Aral

    Pedro Paterno. (1857-1911) Pangulo ng Malolos Congress. Si Pedro A. Paterno ay ipinanganak sa Sta. Cruz Manila noong Pebrero 27, 1857. Nag-aral siya sa Ateneo de Manila at ipinagpatuloy sa Madrid Spain at doon siya nakatapos ng abogasya. Siya ay kilala at tanyag na manunulat noong kanyang kapanahunan. Marami siyang isinulat, tatlo sa kanyang ...

  2. The program drafted for the execution of the Pact of Biak-na-Bato was signed by the Spanish Gov. Gen. Fernando Primo de Rivera and Pedro Paterno. It is dated Dec 14, 1897 and its details (not included in regular textbooks) give a chronology. Transmittal of orders of pacification by Emilio Aguinaldo. Departure of Aguinaldo, his men and the ...

  3. politics, being 'Pedro Paterno' has come to mean being an absconder.6 Labels such as these have punished Paterno long after his death, and in the process have stymied efforts to take his complex personality seriously. Filipino historians have yet to study his voluminous works on history and society in depth.7 More importantly, these very same

  4. Who was Pedro Paterno? 'Pedro Alejandro Paterno y de Vera-Ignacio, also spelled Pedro Alejandro Paterno y Debera Ignacio was a Filipino politician who has been called "the greatest turncoat in Philippine history." He was also a poet and novelist.'.

  5. Pedro Paterno (1858–1911) is widely regarded as a ‘traitor’ to the Philippine nation. That reputation has its origins in his role in the negotiation of the 1897 Pact of Biac-na-Bato between the Philippine revolutionaries and the Spanish, under which the former agreed to abandon their struggle and collaborate with the colonial administration.

  6. Ateneo de Manila University. Profession. Poet. Novelist. Pedro Alejandro Paterno y de Vera-Ignacio, [1] also spelled Pedro Alejandro Paterno y Debera Ignacio (February 17, 1857 – April 26, 1911) [2] was a Filipino independence activist, revolutionary and politician. He was also a poet and novelist. [3] He was the second Prime Minister of the ...

  7. Pedro Paterno causes trouble as a historical figure. On the one hand, he is sometimes considered a national hero of the Philippines. The son of one of the early critics of Spanish colonial practices, Paterno worked to raise the profile of the Philippines in elite European circles, which was one of the strategies of the late nineteenth-century Filipino reform movement that preceded the ...

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