Sangley Rebellion

Last updated

Spanish depiction of Sangley, Chinese in the Philippines, Boxer Codex, late 16th c. Chinese migrants in the Philippines.png
Spanish depiction of Sangley, Chinese in the Philippines, Boxer Codex , late 16th c.

The Sangley Rebellion was a series of armed confrontations between overseas Chinese, known as the Sangley, and the Spanish and their allied forces in Manila under the Captaincy General of the Philippines, in October 1603. The Chinese dominated trading and outnumbered Spanish residents in Manila by a five-to-one ratio. The Spanish feared and resented them. Policies of persecution were enacted against the Chinese and they were expelled from the city to an undesirable swamp area in 1586, which the Chinese turned into a thriving town. The Chinese planned a strike due to worsening relations, but it resulted in the execution of their mayor, and became a rebellion. It ended in the massacre of more than 20,000 Chinese in Manila by Spanish, Japanese, and Filipino forces. [1] [2]

Contents

Background

Chinese settlement

Chinese merchants had been making trading voyages to Manila well before the Spanish arrival. The Chinese were noted in the first Spanish records of the area made by Ferdinand Magellan in 1521 and García Jofre de Loaísa in 1527. In 1570, the Spanish conquered Manila. The locals had only recently developed a monarchy under Muslim influence; they did not raise sustained opposition to Spanish occupation after their king's town was destroyed. The Chinese had settled across the Pasig River in an area granted to them by the Muslim king.[ clarification needed ] They were initially friendly to the Spanish, who rescued a disabled Chinese ship off Mindoro in 1571. Some of the rescued visited Manila in 1572 with large cargo shipments. In 1573 the first cargo of Chinese goods was shipped across the Pacific Ocean to Acapulco in New Spain. Trade with the Chinese continued until the Chinese dominated nearly all the trade to the Americas from Manila. [3]

Spanish control

Chinese Sangley in the Philippines Ming2.jpg
Chinese Sangley in the Philippines

Armed conflict between the Chinese and Spanish soon erupted. In 1574, the pirate Lin Feng tried to take Manila on November 29 and December 2, and was repelled both times. He withdrew to Pangasinan, which he was ejected in March 1575 by a force of Spanish and Filipino soldiers. An officer from the Ming dynasty, Wang Wanggao, who had been sent to track down Lin Feng, was received cordially in Manila. He returned to Fujian with two Spanish envoys and two priests hoping to gain permission to proselytize in China. Although the initial reception to the Spanish in China was positive, the negotiations soon floundered, and the relationship between the Chinese and Spanish became more violent. [4]

By 1586, the Spanish became concerned with the profit the Chinese were making from trade. They were also concerned about being far outnumbered by the Chinese, who totaled 10,000 in Manila, compared to 2,000 Spaniards. The Spanish forced the Chinese out of the city to a swampy area northeast of the city walls. Despite this setback, the Chinese soon developed a thriving town with a pond in its center. By 1590, in addition to trade, the Chinese dominated industries such as bread-making, book-binding, tavern-keeping, and stone-masonry.

In 1587, the Dominicans built a church to proselytize to the Chinese. Their letters back to their order from 1589 and 1590 claim that there was considerable interest from the Chinese converting and adapting their culture to the Spanish model. By 1603 the Spanish colonial authorities made it an established practice to appoint a Christian Chinese as mayor over the Chinese. [5] At the same time, the Spanish sought to restrict Chinese enterprises.

Around 1600 the Spanish started to sell a limited number of residence permits, only 4,000, to the Chinese at 2 reals each. The Spanish also tried to restrict Chinese trade. A decree in 1589 made prices of all Chinese imports uniform and agreed-upon prior to the trading season. In 1593 the Spanish closed Peru to Chinese imports and prohibited Spanish voyages to China. Only certain Spaniards were allowed to trade Chinese goods. [6]

Armed conflict

In 1593, Governor Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas was killed in a mutiny by his Chinese rowers. The rowers fled to Vietnam, where most of them stayed. Some returned to China, where their leader was punished. Fearing an attack by the local Chinese in Manila, the Spanish forced them to relocate to the north side of the Pasig. In 1596, 12,000 Chinese were deported from Manila back to China. In 1603, Spanish fear of the Chinese and dependence on them and the China trade, coupled with the effects of continued immigration, led to efforts to suppress them, and the massacre of over 20,000 Chinese. [1]

Incident

Background

Chinese official from the Ming dynasty Wen Guan Mandarin Letrado - Mandarin Official from China - Boxer Codex (1590).jpg
Chinese official from the Ming dynasty

Two Fujian adventurers, Yan Yinglong and Zhang Yi, told Gao Cai, a eunuch tax and mines commissioner in Fujian, that there was a mountain of gold on the Cavite Peninsula in Manila Bay. A plan was made to send a naval expedition to obtain said gold by attacking Manila, but several censors protested this. Provincial authorities did not believe there was gold where Zhang Yi described but felt they had to send some kind of expedition, if only to prove Zhang wrong. So an assistant county magistrate, Wang Shihe, and a company commander, Yu Yicheng, were sent to confirm the story, along with Zhang in chains. [1]

The Ming delegation arrived in March 1603 and was received by governor Pedro Bravo de Acuña. They were well treated, but when they tried to administer justice in the Chinese community, they were ordered to stop. In May they made it clear to the governor that they did not believe there was a mountain of gold but were obliged to obey their orders.

The governor allowed them to go to Cavite, where they took a basket of dirt, then left for China. The Spanish did not believe the expedition had been sent only to search for gold. Archbishop of Manila Miguel de Benavides, O. P. suspected that they had been a probe sent in advance of a major Chinese invasion. The Spanish feared that the local Chinese would cooperate with an invasion. Spanish, Filipino, and even Japanese residents began to threaten the Chinese. [7] [2]

Rebellion

Japanese inhabitants of the Philippines Japanese inhabitants in the Philippines.png
Japanese inhabitants of the Philippines

A large group of Chinese planned a strike. The Chinese mayor, Juan Bautista de la Vera, a wealthy Catholic, tried to dissuade them but found that his own adopted son was the leader. They tried to persuade him to become their leader, but he refused and reported them to the Spaniards. The Spaniards arrested him after finding gunpowder in his house and eventually executed him. [7]

Alerted to the unrest among the Chinese, the Spanish shut the city gates on the night of October 3. One Spanish family was murdered north of the Pasig, while an attack on the church in Tondo was repelled by Spanish soldiers, whose commander, Luis Pérez Dasmariñas, overconfident of Spanish strength, pursued the Chinese. When cautioned against attacking by his fellow officers, he derided them as cowards and retorted that "twenty five Spaniards were enough to conquer the whole of China". [8] The Spanish followed the Chinese into a swamp, where they were surrounded and cut down. [7]

On October 6, Chinese rebels crossed the Pasig and attacked the city walls with ladders and siege towers. While they had obtained some firearms from the Spaniards they had defeated, they did not have enough to overcome the artillery on the walls. Their assault was defeated and their ladders and towers demolished by cannon shots. After a day or two, Spanish and Japanese soldiers sortied out and attacked the Chinese with support from Filipino auxiliaries. The Chinese fled and were pursued through the countryside in the following weeks. Those who were captured were killed. An estimated 15,000 to 25,000 Chinese were slaughtered. [9] [2]

Aftermath

After the slaughter, the Spanish realized that they could not survive without Chinese trade and industry. They assured the remaining Chinese merchants that normal trade would be restored and continue as usual. Spanish officials sent letters to Fujian and Guangdong authorities explaining what had happened. Fujian officials blamed most of what had occurred on Zhang Yi, but replied that the Spanish should not have killed the Chinese, and that widows and orphans should be sent back to China. No further action was taken.

Because the Chinese town had been devastated, Chinese merchants visiting Manila in 1604 were given fine lodging inside the walled city. Trade quickly returned to normal, with 1606–1610 averaging over three million pesos per year, the highest five-year average in history. [10]

Chinese continued to live under Spanish rule. Although they were exempt from the labour and dues required of Filipinos, the Chinese had to pay a license fee of eight pesos a year, and often suffering additional extortion and harassment from sellers. They were also subject to population control, with the Spanish establishing a limit of 6,000 Chinese in Manila. But the ethnic Chinese population in the 1620s and 1630s ranged from 15,000 to 21,000. The Chinese petitioned the king of Spain for self-government, but this proposal was rejected in 1630.

As the Chinese population continued to swell, reaching 33,000–45,000 by 1639, they entered other industries such as farming. They were laborers on their own in outlying areas, employed on estates of religious orders, or used as farm labor in forced settlement projects. This large rural Chinese population rebelled again in 1639, and suffered another massacre. [11]

Art history

The Museo Bello in Puebla, Mexico has a wooden chest in its collection adorned with what is believed to be the oldest image of Manila. Its dating was determined by the details, said to reflect Manila just prior to the October massacre. "The most important visual clue that can be found in the painting is the group of figures in the Parián." [12] This scene depicts three Chinese officials mounted on horseback, accompanied by three stewards, in a deserted marketplace, which otherwise would have been teeming. The three officials have been identified as the three visitors arriving to determine the validity of the story of the mountain of gold in Cavite.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Willis 1998, p. 358.
  2. 1 2 3 Boxer 1993, p. 261.
  3. Willis 1998, p. 353–354.
  4. Willis 1998, p. 355–356.
  5. Willis 1998, p. 356–358.
  6. Willis 1998, p. 356.
  7. 1 2 3 Willis 1998, p. 359.
  8. Kratoska 2001, p. 135.
  9. Willis 1998, p. 359–360.
  10. Willis 1998, p. 360.
  11. Willis 1998, p. 361.
  12. Capistrano-Baker, p. 54.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cavite City</span> Component city in Cavite, Philippines

Cavite City, officially the City of Cavite, is a 2nd class component city in the Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 100,674 people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Binondo</span> District of Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines

Binondo is a district in Manila and is referred to as the city's Chinatown. Its influence extends beyond to the places of Quiapo, Santa Cruz, San Nicolas and Tondo. It is the oldest Chinatown in the world, established in 1594 by the Spaniards as a settlement near Intramuros but across the Pasig River for Catholic Chinese; it was positioned so that the colonial administration could keep a close eye on their migrant subjects. It was already a hub of Chinese commerce even before the Spanish colonial period. Binondo is the center of commerce and trade of Manila, where all types of business run by Filipino-Chinese thrive.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sangley</span> Archaic terms used in the Philippines

Sangley and Mestizo de Sangley are archaic terms used in the Philippines during the Spanish colonial era to describe respectively a person of pure overseas Chinese ancestry and a person of mixed Chinese and native Filipino ancestry. The Sangley Chinese were ancestors to both modern Chinese Filipinos and modern Filipino mestizo descendants of the Mestizos de Sangley., who were mestizos under the Spanish colonial empire, classified together with other Filipino mestizos.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philippine Hokkien</span> Dialect of Hokkien spoken in the Philippines

Philippine Hokkien is a dialect of the Hokkien language of the Southern Min branch of the Sinitic family, primarily spoken vernacularly by Chinese Filipinos in the Philippines, where it serves as the local Chinese lingua franca, primarily spoken as an oral language, within the overseas Chinese community in the Philippines and acts as the heritage language of a majority of Chinese Filipinos. The use of Hokkien in the Philippines is influenced by Philippine Spanish, Filipino (Tagalog) and Philippine English. As a lingua franca of the overseas Chinese community in the Philippines, the minority of Cantonese-/Taishanese-descended Chinese Filipinos also uses Philippine Hokkien for business purposes due to its status as "the Chinoy business language" [sic].

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas</span>

Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas was a Spanish politician, diplomat, military officer and imperial official. He was the seventh governor-general of the Philippines from May or June 1, 1590 to October 25, 1593. Dasmariñas was a member of the Order of Santiago.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philippine revolts against Spain</span> List of rebellions in the Philippines during Spanish colonial rule (1565–1898)

During the Spanish colonial period in the Philippines (1565–1898), there were several revolts against the Spanish colonial government by indigenous Moro, Lumad, Indios, Chinese (Sangleys), and Insulares, often with the goal of re-establishing the rights and powers that had traditionally belonged to Lumad communities, Maginoo rajah, and Moro datus. Some revolts stemmed from land problems and this was largely the cause of the insurrections that transpired in the agricultural provinces of Batangas, Bulacan, Cavite, and Laguna. Natives also rebelled over unjust taxation and forced labor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Luis Pérez Dasmariñas</span>

Luis Pérez Dasmariñas y Páez de Sotomayor was a Spanish soldier and governor of the Philippines from December 3, 1593 to July 14, 1596. In 1596, he sent unsuccessful expeditions to conquer Cambodia and Mindanao.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pedro Bravo de Acuña</span>

Pedro Bravo de Acuña was a Spanish military officer and colonial official in the New World and the Philippines. From 1602 to 1606 he was the eleventh governor of the Philippines.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Limahong</span> 16th-century Chinese pirate

Limahong, Lim Hong, or Lin Feng, well known as Ah Hong or Lim-A-Hong or Limahon, was a Chinese pirate and warlord who invaded the northern Philippine islands in 1574. He built up a reputation for his constant raids to ports in Guangdong, Fujian and southern China. He is noted to have twice attempted, and failed, to invade the Spanish city of Manila in 1574.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Manila</span>

The earliest recorded history of Manila, the capital of the Philippines, dates back to the year 900 AD as recorded in the Laguna Copperplate Inscription. By the thirteenth century, the city consisted of a fortified settlement and trading quarter near the mouth of the Pasig River, the river that bisects the city into north and south.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Naval Station Sangley Point</span> Former US naval base located in Cavite, Philippines

Naval Station Sangley Point was a communication and hospital facility of the United States Navy which occupied the northern portion of the Cavite City peninsula and is surrounded by Manila Bay, approximately eight miles southwest of Manila, the Philippines. The station was a part of the Cavite Navy Yard across the peninsula. The naval station had a runway that was built after World War II, which was used by U.S. Navy Lockheed P-2 Neptune, Lockheed P-3 Orion, and Martin P4M Mercator maritime patrol and anti-submarine warfare aircraft. An adjacent seaplane runway, ramp area and seaplane tender berths also supported Martin P5M Marlin maritime patrol aircraft until that type's retirement from active naval service in the late 1960s. NAS Sangley Point/NAVSTA Sangley Point was also used extensively during the Vietnam War, primarily for U.S. Navy patrol squadrons forward deployed from the United States on six-month rotations. The naval station was turned over to the Philippine government in 1971. It is now operated by the Philippine Air Force and Philippine Navy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of the Philippines (1565–1898)</span> Spanish colonial period of the Philippines

The history of the Philippines from 1565 to 1898 is known as the Spanish colonial period, during which the Philippine Islands were ruled as the Captaincy General of the Philippines within the Spanish East Indies, initially under the Viceroyalty of New Spain, based in Mexico City, until the independence of the Mexican Empire from Spain in 1821. This resulted in direct Spanish control during a period of governmental instability there. The Philippines was under direct royal governance from 1821 to 1898.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Naval Base Cavite</span>

Naval Station Pascual Ledesma, also known as Cavite Naval Base or Cavite Navy Yard, is a military installation of the Philippine Navy in Cavite City. In the 1940s and '50s, it was called Philippine Navy Operating Base. The 9-hectare (22-acre) naval base is located at the easternmost end of Cavite Point in the San Roque district of the city. Via traffic lane, this naval establishment is next to the famous Samonte Park. It was the former extension of U.S. Naval Station Sangley Point which is now Naval Station Heracleo Alano. In 2009, it was named after Cmdre. Pascual Ledesma, a leader of the Philippine Revolution and the first Officer-In-Command of the Philippine Navy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Racism in the Philippines</span> Overview of ethnic issues in the Philippines

Racism in the Philippines is multifarious and emerged in various portions of the history of people, institutions and territories coinciding to that of the present-day Philippines.

The Battle of Pateros refers to a series of skirmishes between Spanish troops and revolutionary forces in the towns of Las Piñas, Taguig and Pateros in Manila. These skirmishes occurred shortly after the execution of José Rizal and are considered the renewal of hostilities in Luzon after a period of ceasefire from the Battle of Binakayan to the Rizal execution.

The Cambodian–Spanish War (1593-1597) was an attempt to conquer Cambodia on behalf of King Satha I and Christianize Cambodia's population by the Spanish and Portuguese Empires. Along with the Spanish, Spanish Filipinos, native Filipinos, Mexican recruits, and Japanese mercenaries participated in the invasion of Cambodia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Roque Church (Cavite City)</span> Roman Catholic church in Cavite, Philippines

San Roque Church, also called the Diocesan Shrine of the Our Lady of Solitude of Porta Vaga is a Latin Rite Roman Catholic church in Cavite City on Luzon island, the Philippines. It enshrines Our Lady of Solitude of Porta Vaga, an icon that appeared after an apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

The 2nd Sangley Rebellion was the uprising of rural Sangley in Manila against the Captaincy General of the Philippines in 1639. It resulted in the massacre of around 17,000-22,000 Chinese.

The Sangley Massacre occurred in June 1662 when the governor of the Captaincy General of the Philippines ordered the killing of any Sangley who had not submitted to the assembly area.

The Sino-Spanish conflicts were a series of conflicts between the Spanish Empire and the Qing Dynasty between the 16th and 18th centuries over control of the Philippine islands.

References