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  1. The Cavite mutiny (Spanish: Motín de Cavite; Filipino: Pag-aaklas sa Kabite) was an uprising of Filipino military personnel of Fort San Felipe, the Spanish arsenal in Cavite,: 107 Philippine Islands (then also known as part of the Spanish East Indies) on January 20, 1872.

  2. Cavite Mutiny, brief uprising of 200 Filipino troops and workers at the Cavite arsenal on January 20, 1872, which became the excuse for Spanish repression of the embryonic Philippine nationalist movement.

  3. One hundred and forty years ago, on January 20, 1872, about 200 Filipino military personnel of Fort San Felipe Arsenal in Cavite, Philippines, staged a mutiny which in a way led to the Philippine Revolution in 1896.

  4. Jul 30, 2022 · The Cavite Mutiny was an uprising of 200 Filipino troops and workers at the military arsenal in Cavite on 20 January 1872. A “mutiny” is when a group of soldiers openly resist and defy the military leadership.

  5. Textbook accounts of the 1872 revolt in Cavite generally see it as a mutiny of Filipino soldiers and arsenal workers over local grievances, often portraying it as instigated by the friars with the intention of eliminating

  6. On January 20, 1872, the Cavite Mutiny, an uprising of military personnel at the Spanish arsenal in Cavite, took place. This event subsequently led to the execution of the Filipino priests Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos and Jacinto Zamora, collectively known as GOMBURZA .

  7. sinaunangpanahon.com › cavite-mutiny-1872Cavite Mutiny 1872

    Jan 14, 2024 · The Cavite Mutiny was an uprising that took place on January 20, 1872, in the Spanish-controlled province of Cavite in the Philippines. It was carried out by a group of Filipino soldiers and craftsmen known as the Katipunan.

  8. Textbook accounts of the 1872 revolt in Cavite generally see it as a mutiny of Filipino soldiers and arsenal workers over local grievances, often portraying it as instigated by the friars with the intention of eliminating the priests and lawyers agitating for reforms.

  9. the official interpretation of the mutiny in Cavite as part of a general revolt directed by the three priests and their lay and clerical colleagues in Manila and Cavite, having as its aim the

  10. Until he breathed his last, Father Burgos protested innocence of the crime imputed to him and Rizal, in dedicating the Filibusterismo to the three condemned men, underscored the doubt shared by the Filipinos over their guilt.

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