Timeline of Philippine history
This is a timeline of Philippine history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in the Philippines and their predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of the Philippines. See also the list of Presidents of the Philippines.
- This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Pre-historic
Year (BCE) | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
500,000 | The early humans in the Cagayan cave. | |
400,000 | People belonging to the species Homo Erectus set foot on the Philippines. | |
55,000 | The first Homo Sapiens in the Philippines. | |
50,000 | Early humans made stone tools in the Tabon Cave in Palawan. | |
8,000 | The ancestors in the other caves: Batangas, Bulacan and Rizal. | |
The other caves of Palawan: Guri and Duyong cave where the Homo Sapiens lived. | ||
40,000 | Negritos start to settle. | |
20,000 | Tabon Man made stone tools in the Tabon Cave. | |
4,500–300 | Multiple Austronesian migrations from Taiwan. | |
3,000 | Presumed date of the Angono Petroglyphs. |
10th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
900 | End of prehistory. Laguna Copperplate Inscription, the earliest known Philippine document, is written in the Manila area in Kawi script. | |
Rise of Indianized polity of Tondo around Manila Bay. |
11th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1000 | People from Central Vietnam called Orang Dampuan establish trade zones in Sulu | |
1001 | March 17 | Song Shih document records tributary delegation from the Indic Rajahnate of Butuan. |
12th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1175 | Namayan reaches its peak. |
13th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1240 | Tuan Masha'ika, an Arab, travels and introduces Islam to Sulu. |
14th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1380 | Sheikh Karim-ul Makhdum arrives in Jolo and builds a Mosque. | |
1390 | Baguinda Ali arrives in Buansa, Sulu and the people named him Rajah. | |
1400 | Birth of the Baybayin, Hanunoo, Tagbanwa, and Buhid scripts from Brahmi. |
15th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1457 | Sultanate of Sulu founded by Sayyid Abubakar Abirin.[1] |
16th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1500 | Rise of Kingdom of Maynila under the Bolkiah dynasty | |
1521 | March 16 | Ferdinand Magellan lands on Homonhon with three small ships, named the Concepcion, Trinidad and Victoria. Magellan calls the place the Arcigelago de San Lazaro since March 16 is the feast day of Saint Lazarus |
March 28 | Magellan reaches the Philippines | |
March 29 | Blood Compact between Magellan and Rajah Kulambo of Limasawa | |
March 31 | The first mass on Philippine soil is celebrated. | |
April 7 | Magellan meets Rajah Humabon of Cebu and enters into another Blood Compact. Humabon and his wife are baptized into the Catholic Church. | |
April 27 | Magellan is killed by Lapu-Lapu in the battle of Mactan. | |
1525 | Spain sends an expedition under Juan Garcia Jofre de Loaysa to the Philippines. The Loaysa Expedition failed | |
1526 | Spain sends another expedition under Juan Cabot to the Philippines. The Cabot Expedition also failed | |
1527 | Spain sends a fourth expedition under Alvaro de Saavedra to the Philippines. | |
1529 | Saavedra's expedition returns to Spain without Saavedra who died on the way home. | |
1536 | The Loaysa expedition returns to Spain. One of its survivors is Andres de Urdaneta, its chronicler. | |
1543 | Spain sends a fifth expedition under Ruy López de Villalobos to the Philippines. The Expedition succeeds | |
February 2 | Villalobos arrives in the Philippines and names the islands of Samar and Leyte as Las Islas Filipinas in honor of the crown prince of Spain, Philip of Asturias | |
1565 | February 13 | Miguel López de Legazpi arrives in the Philippines with four ships and 380 men |
8 May | Legazpi established the first permanent Spanish settlement in the country | |
Philippines was governed as a territory of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. | ||
1567 | Dagami Revolt (1567)[2][3][4][5][6] | |
1568 | The Portuguese, under the command of General Gonzalo de Pereira, attack Cebu and blockade its port. | |
1570 | The Portuguese again attack the colony and are repulsed. | |
May | Legaspi sends an expedition under the leadership of Martin de Goiti to Manila. | |
1571 | 19 May | The ruler of Manila, Rajah Suliman, wages war against the Spaniards |
June 24 | Legaspi establishes the Spanish Colonial Government in Manila and proclaims it the capital of the colony | |
1572 | August 20 | Legazpi dies and Guido de Lavezaris succeeds him as Governor-General (1572–1575) |
1574 | November 23 | The Chinese pirate captain Limahong attacks Manila but fails |
December 2 | Limahong again attacks Manila with 1500 soldiers but again fails to defeat the Spaniards | |
December | Lakandula leads a short revolt against the Spanish.[2][3][4][5][6] | |
1575 | Ciudad de Nueva Cáceres(later renamed as Naga City) established by Captain Pedro de Sanchez | |
August 25 | Francisco de Sande appointed Governor-General (1575–1580) | |
1579 | Diocese of Manila established | |
1580 | April | Gonzalo Ronquillo de Peñaloza appointed Governor-General (1580–1583) |
King Philip II of Spain becomes King of Portugal, ending the Portuguese harassment of the Philippines | ||
The Spaniards institute forced labor on all male natives aged 16 to 60. | ||
1582 | Battles take place between Spanish forces and Japanese Ronin | |
1583 | March 10 | Diego Ronquillo appointed Governor-General (1583–1584) |
August | A great fire destroys Manila | |
1584 | 16 May | Santiago de Vera appointed Governor-General (1584–1590) |
1585 | Pampangos Revolt (1585)[2][3][4][5][6] | |
1587 | Conspiracy of the Maharlikas (1587–1588)[2][3][4][5][6] | |
1589 | Revolts Against the Tribute (1589)[2][3][4][5][6] | |
1590 | Missionaries from the Society of Jesus established the Colegio de Manila in Intramuros.[7][8][9] | |
June 1 | Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas appointed Governor-General (1590–1593) | |
1592 | Miguel de Benavides's Doctrina Christiana in Chinese published | |
1593 | Doctrina Christiana in Spanish and Tagalog published | |
October | Pedro de Rojas appointed Governor-General (1593) | |
December 3 | Luis Pérez Dasmariñas appointed Governor-General (1593–1596) | |
1595 | Diocese of Manila raised to an Archbishopric | |
Diocese of Nueva Segovia established. | ||
Diocese of Caceres established. | ||
Diocese of Cebu established. | ||
Colegio de San Ildefonso founded in Cebu | ||
1596 | Magalat Revolt (1596)[2][3][4][5][6] | |
July 14 | Francisco de Tello de Guzmán appointed Governor-General (1596–1602) | |
1598 | Colegio de Santa Potenciana, the first school for girls in the Philippines, established[7][10][11][12] | |
1600 | Pedro Bucaneg inscribes the oral epic Biag ni Lam-ang |
17th century
18th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1701 | December 8 | Domingo Zabálburu de Echevarri appointed Governor-General (1701–1709). |
1709 | August 25 | Martín de Urzua y Arismendi appointed Governor-General (1709–1715). |
1715 | February 4 | Jose Torralba appointed Governor-General (1715–1717) by the Audiencia Real. |
1717 | August 9 | Fernando Manuel de Bustillo Bustamante y Rueda appointed Governor-General (1717–1719). |
1718 | Rivera Revolt (1718)[2][3][4][5][6] | |
1719 | October 11 | Archbishop Francisco de la Cuesta of Manila becomes acting Governor-General (1719–1721). |
Caragay Revolt (1719)[2][3][4][5][6] | ||
1721 | August 6 | Toribio José Cosio y Campo appointed Governor-General (1721–1729). |
1722 | Colegio de San Jose conferred with the title Royal. | |
1729 | August 14 | Fernándo Valdés y Tamon appointed Governor-General (1729–1739). |
1739 | July | Gaspar de la Torre appointed Governor-General (1739–1745). |
1744 | Dagohoy Rebellion (1744–1829) | |
1745 | September 21 | Archbishop Juan Arrechederra of Manila becomes acting Governor-General (1745–1750). |
Agrarian Revolt (1745–1746)[2][3][4][5][6] | ||
1750 | July 20 | Jose Francisco de Obando y Solis appointed Governor-General (1750–1754). |
1754 | 15 May | Mt Taal emits magma and destroys the towns of Lipa, Sala, Tanauan and Talisay. |
July 26 | Pedro Manuel de Arandia Santisteban appointed Governor-General (1754–1759). | |
1759 | June | Miguel Lino de Ezpeleta appointed Governor-General (1759–1761). |
1761 | July | Archbishop Manuel Rojo del Rio y Vieyra of Manila appointed Governor-General (1761–1762). |
1762 | Silang Revolt (1762–63) | |
Palaris Revolt (1762–1765) | ||
Camarines Revolt (1762–1764) | ||
Cebu Revolt (1762–1764) | ||
British forces looted and plundered many of Manila establishments through the so-called Rape of Manila. | ||
September 22 | British fleet entered seizes Manila Bay as part of the Seven Years' War | |
October 5 | Manila fell under the British rule; start of the British occupation. | |
October 6 | Simón de Anda y Salazar appointed Governor-General (1762-17614) by the Real Audiencia. Provisional Government established in Bacolor, Pampanga with de Anda as dictator. | |
November 2 | The British East India Company commissioned The Rt Hon. Dawsonne Drake became the first British governor-general of the Philippines until 1764. | |
1763 | Dabo and Marayac Revolt (1763) | |
Isabela Revolt (1763). | ||
February 10 | Treaty of Paris implicitly returns Manila to Spain. | |
28 May | Deaths of Gabriela Silang, the only Filipina to have led a revolt, and her husband Diego. | |
1764 | March 17 | de Anda hands over the control of the colonial government to Francisco Javier de la Torre, newly appointed Governor-General (1764–1765) |
June 11 | The last of the British ships that sailed to Manila leaves the Philippines for India, ending the British occupation. | |
1765 | February 10 | Royal Fiscal of Manila Don Francisco Léandro de Viana writes the famous letter to King Charles III of Spain, later called as "Viana Memorial of 1765". The document advised the king to abandon the colony due to the economic and social devastation created by the Seven Years' War. The suggestion was not heeded. |
July 6 | José Antonio Raón y Gutiérrez appointed Governor-General (1765–1770) | |
Governor Raon orders the minting of parallelogramic-shaped coins called barrillas, the first coined minted in the Philippines. | ||
1769 | July 23 | The Society of Jesus in the Philippines is expelled by Raón after receiving a dated later from Charles III's chief minister Don Pedro Pablo Abarca de Bolea on March 1, 1767. The Jesuit's Properties are confiscated by the Spanish Colonial Government |
1770 | July | Simón de Anda y Salazar appointed Governor-General (1770–1776) |
1771 | Moro pirates traveled all over the country and raids many fishing villages in Manila Bay, Mariveles, Parañaque, Pasay and Malate. | |
1774 | November 9 | Parishes secularized by order of King Charles III of Spain. |
1776 | October 30 | Pedro de Sarrio appointed Governor-General (1776–1778) |
1778 | July | José Basco y Vargas appointed Governor-General (1778–1787) |
1780 | Real Sociedad Economica de los Amigos del Pais de Filipinas (Royal Economic Society of Friends of the Philippines) introduced in the Philippines to offer local and foreign scholarships and professorships to Filipinos, and financed trips of scientists from Spain to the Philippines | |
1783 | Bishop Mateo Joaquin de Arevalo of Cebu establishes the Colegio-Seminario de San Carlos(later renamed as the University of San Carlos) from the old building of the defunct Colegio de San Ildefonso, which was closed down in 1769 after the suppression of the Jesuits. | |
1785 | Lagutao Revolt (1785). | |
20 May | University of Santo Tomas granted Royal Title by King Charles III of Spain.[16][17] | |
1787 | September 22 | Pedro de Sarrio appointed Governor-General (1787–1788) |
1788 | Ilocos Norte Revolt (1788). | |
April 2 | Birth of the greatest Tagalog poet from Bulacan Francisco "Balagtas" Baltazar. | |
July 1 | Félix Berenguer de Marquina appointed Governor-General (1788–1793) | |
1793 | September 1 | Rafael María de Aguilar y Ponce de León appointed Governor-General (1793–1806) |
19th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1805 | Nueva Vizcaya Revolt (1805) | |
1806 | August 7 | Mariano Fernández de Folgueras appointed Governor-General (1806–1810) |
1807 | Ambaristo Revolt (1807) | |
1808 | May | French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte installs his brother Joseph Bonaparte as King of Spain. |
1809 | January 22 | King Joseph Bonaparte gives Filipinos Spanish Citizenship and grants the colony representation in the Spanish Cortes |
1810 | March 4 | Manuel Gonzalez de Aguilar appointed Governor-General (1806–1813) |
1812 | March 19 | The Spanish Cortes promulgates the Cadiz Constitution |
September 24 | The first Philippine delegates to the Spanish Cortes, Pedro Perez de Tagle and Jose Manuel Coretto take their oath of office in Madrid, Spain. | |
1813 | September 4 | José Gardoqui Jaraveitia appointed Governor-General (1806–1816) |
March 17 | The Cadiz Constitution implemented in Manila | |
October 16 | Napoleon is defeated in the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig | |
October | British General Duke of Wellington drives the Napoleonic forces out of Spain | |
1814 | Ferdinand VII proclaimed as King of Spain; Conservatives return to the Spanish Cortes | |
1815 | June 18 | Napoleon is defeated in Waterloo |
October 15 | Napoleon is exiled in St. Helena's Island | |
1816 | Cadiz Constitution is rejected by the conservative government and Filipino representation in the Spanish Cortes is abolished | |
December 10 | Mariano Fernández de Folgueras appointed Governor-General (1816–1822) | |
1822 | October 30 | Juan Antonio Martínez appointed Governor-General (1822–1825) |
1825 | October 14 | Mariano Ricafort Palacín y Abarca appointed Governor-General (1825–1830) |
1828 | Earthquake strikes Manila destroying many of its buildings | |
1830 | December 23 | Pascual Enrile y Alcedo appointed Governor-General (1830–1835) |
Manila is opened to the world market | ||
1835 | March 1 | Gabriel de Torres appointed Governor-General (1835) |
April 23 | Joaquín de Crámer appointed Governor-General (1835) | |
September 9 | Pedro Antonio Salazar Castillo y Varona appointed Governor-General (1835) | |
Chamber of Commerce is formed | ||
1837 | August 27 | Andrés García Camba appointed Governor-General (1837–1838) |
Manila is made an open port. | ||
1838 | December 29 | Luis Lardizábal appointed Governor-General (1838–1841) |
Florante at Laura is published. | ||
1841 | February 14 | Marcelino de Oraá Lecumberri appointed Governor-General (1841–1843) |
November 4 | Apolinario Dela Cruz better known as Hermano Pule was executed. | |
1843 | June 17 | Francisco de Paula Alcalá de la Torre appointed Governor-General (1843–1844) |
1844 | July 16 | Narciso Clavería y Zaldúa appointed Governor-General (1844–1849) |
1849 | December 26 | Antonio María Blanco appointed Governor-General (1849–1850) |
1850 | July 29 | Antonio de Urbistondo y Eguía appointed Governor-General (1850–1853) |
1852 | December 4 | Glowing avalanche from Mt Hibok-Hibok. |
1853 | December 20 | Ramón Montero y Blandino appointed Governor-General (1853–1854) |
1854 | February 2 | Manuel Pavía y Lacy appointed Governor-General (1854) |
October 28 | Ramón Montero y Blandino appointed Governor-General (1854) | |
November 20 | Manuel Crespo y Cebrían appointed Governor-General (1854) | |
1856 | December 5 | Ramón Montero y Blandino appointed Governor-General (1856–1857) |
1857 | January 12 | Fernándo Norzagaray y Escudero appointed Governor-General (1857–1860) |
1859 | Jesuits return to the Philippines | |
Jesuits takes over the Escuela Municipal and establishes the Ateneo Municipal | ||
1860 | January 12 | Ramón María Solano y Llanderal appointed Governor-General (1860) |
August 29 | Juan Herrera Dávila appointed Governor-General (1860–1861) | |
1861 | February 2 | José Lemery e Ibarrola Ney y González appointed Governor-General (1861–1862) |
June 19 | Jose Rizal, Philippines' National Hero is born. | |
Escuela de Artes Y Oficios de Bacolor established as Asia's oldest vocational school. | ||
1862 | July 7 | Salvador Valdés appointed Governor-General (1862) |
July 9 | Rafaél de Echagüe y Bermingham appointed Governor-General (1862–1865) | |
1863 | June 3 | An earthquake leaves Manila in ruins |
November 30 | Andres Bonifacio, founder of the Katipunan, was born. | |
1864 | July 23 | Apolinario Mabini, the Brains of the Revolution, was born. |
1865 | University of Santo Tomas made the center for public instruction throughout the Philippines by royal decree of Queen Isabella II of Spain.[16][17] | |
Observatorio Meteorológico del Ateneo Municipal de Manila (Manila Observatory) established by the Jesuits | ||
March 24 | Joaquín del Solar e Ibáñez appointed Governor-General (1862–1865) | |
April 25 | Juan de Lara e Irigoyen appointed Governor-General (1862–1865) | |
1866 | July 13 | José Laureano de Sanz y Posse appointed Governor-General (1866) |
September 21 | Juan Antonio Osorio appointed Governor-General (1866) | |
September 27 | Joaquín del Solar e Ibáñez appointed Governor-General (1866) | |
October 26 | José de la Gándara y Navarro appointed Governor-General (1866–1869) | |
1867 | Colegio de Santa Isabel established in Naga by Bishop Francisco Gainza, OP of Nueva Caceres, through the royal decree of Queen Isabella II of Spain. | |
1869 | November 17 | Suez Canal opened |
Colegio de Santa Isabel inaugurated as the first Normal School in Southeast Asia | ||
June 7 | Joaquín del Solar e Ibáñez appointed Governor-General (1866) | |
June 23 | José de la Gándara y Navarro appointed Governor-General (1869–1871) | |
1871 | The Gabinete de Fisica of the University of Santo Tomas established as the first Museum in the Philippines.[16][17] | |
The Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy of the University of Santo Tomas is established as the first schools of Medicine and Pharmacy in the Philippines.[16][17] | ||
April 4 | Rafael de Izquierdo y Gutíerrez appointed Governor-General (1871–1873) | |
1872 | January 20 | 200 Filipino soldiers stage a mutiny in Cavite. |
February 17 | Priests Mariano Gomez, José Apolonio Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora (together known as Gomburza) are implicated in the Cavite Mutiny and executed. | |
1873 | January 8 | Manuel MacCrohon appointed Governor-General (1873) |
January 24 | Juan Alaminos y Vivar appointed Governor-General (1873–1874) | |
1874 | March 17 | Manuel Blanco Valderrama acting appointed Governor-General (1874) |
June 18 | José Malcampo y Monje appointed Governor-General (1874–1877) | |
1875 | The Colegio de San Jose incorporated into the Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy of the University of Santo Tomas.[16][17][24][25] | |
1877 | February 28 | Domingo Moriones y Murillo appointed Governor-General (1877–1880) |
1880 | March 20 | Rafael Rodríguez Arias appointed Governor-General (1880) |
April 15 | Fernando Primo de Rivera, 1st Marquis of Estella appointed Governor-General (1880–1883)(1st Term) | |
Manila is connected through telegraphic cable Europe by Eastern Telecom. | ||
July 18 | Two shocks of an earthquake create destruction from Manila to Santa Cruz, Luguna. Tremors continue until Aug 6 | |
1882 | March 3 | Jose Rizal leaves for Spain to continue his medical studies |
June 2 | Jose Rizal begins writing the Noli Me Tangere(novel) | |
1883 | March 10 | Emilio Molíns becomes acting Governor-General (1883). (First Term) |
April 7 | Joaquín Jovellar appointed Governor-General (1883–1885) | |
1884 | Required forced labor of 40 days a year is reduced to 15 days by the Spanish Colonial Government. | |
June 21 | Rizal finishes his medical studies in Spain | |
1885 | April 1 | Emilio Molíns becomes acting Governor-General (1885). (First Term) |
April 4 | Emilio Terrero y Perinat appointed Governor-General (1885–1888) | |
1887 | 29 May | Noli Me Tangere published. |
October | Rizal starts writing the El Filibusterismo | |
The Manila School of Agriculture is established. | ||
1888 | March 10 | Antonio Molto becomes acting Governor-General (1888) |
Federico Lobaton became acting Governor-General (1888) | ||
Valeriano Wéyler appointed Governor-General (1888–1891) | ||
December 10 | La Solidaridad established | |
1891 | March 28 | Rizal finishes writing El Filibusterismo in Biarritz, France |
El Filibusterismo published in Ghent, Belgium | ||
Eulogio Despujol appointed Governor-General (1891–1893) | ||
1892 | June 26 | Rizal arrives in the Philippines from Europe via Hong Kong |
July 3 | Rizal forms the La Liga Filipina | |
July 7 | Rizal is arrested for establishing the La Liga Filipina | |
July 7 | Andres Bonifacio secretly established the Katipunan. | |
July 17 | Rizal is exiled to Dapitan | |
September 23 | Filipino painter Juan Luna shot dead his wife Paz Pardo De Tavera. | |
1893 | March 10 | Federico Ochando becomes acting Governor-General (1893) |
Ramón Blanco appointed Governor-General (1893–1896) | ||
1894 | July 8 | Bonifacio forms the Katipunan |
1896 | July 1 | Rizal is recruited as a physician for the Spanish Army in Cuba by Governor Ramon Blanco |
August 6 | Rizal returns to Manila from Cuba | |
August 19 | The Katipunan discovered by the Spanish Colonial Government. Katipuneros flee to Balintawak | |
August 23 | Revolution is proclaimed by Bonifacio at the Cry of Balintawak. Katipuneros tear up their cedulas | |
August 26 | Andres Bonifacio, Emilio Jacinto and other Katipuneros board Rizal's ship to Barcelona. They offer his rescue but Rizal refused | |
August 30 | Revolutionary Battle at San Juan del Monte. Governor Ramon Blanco proclaims a state of war in Manila, Laguna, Cavite, Batangas, Pampanga, Bulacan, Tarlac and Nueva Ecija. | |
September 2 | Rizal Boards the ship Isla de Panay for Barcelona | |
September 12 | Thirteen Filipinos were executed in Cavite. | |
October 3 | Rizal arrives at Barcelona | |
October 4 | Rizal is imprisoned in Montjuich by order of Capt. Gen. Despujo | |
October 6 | Rizal returns to Manila as a prisoner | |
October 31 | A new group of the Katipunan is formed in Cavite headed by Emilio Aguinaldo | |
November 13 | Rizal arrives in Manila and incarcerated in Fort Santiago | |
November 20 | Rizal is interrogated for charges against the Spanish Colonial Government | |
December 13 | Camilo Polavieja becomes acting Governor-General (1896–1897) | |
December 30 | Rizal is executed at Bagumbayan | |
1897 | January 4 | Eleven of the 15 Filipinos of Bicol were executed at the Luneta in Manila |
January 11 | Thirteen Filipinos were executed at Bagumbayan | |
March 22 | The Katipunan holds its election. Emilio Aguinaldo is elected as president | |
March 23 | Nineteen Filipinos of Kalibo, Aklan were executed | |
April 15 | José de Lachambre becomes acting Governor-General (1897) | |
April 23 | Fernando Primo de Rivera appointed Governor-General (1897–1898) | |
April 29 | Katipuneros arrest Andres Bonifacio and his brothers Procopio and Ciriaco on orders of Aguinaldo with sedition and treason before a military court of the Katipunan. | |
8 May | The Katipunan convicts and sentences Bonifacio brothers to death | |
10 May | Andres Bonifacio and his brothers are executed at Mt. Buntis, Maragondon, Cavite. | |
31 May | Aguinaldo establishes a Philippine republican government in Biak-na-Bato, San Miguel, Bulacan. | |
August 10 | Aguinaldo begins negotiating with the Spaniards colonial government in Manila with Pedro Paterno as representative. | |
August 15 | A 7.9 intensity estimated earthquake hits Luzon's northwest coast | |
November 1 | Constitution of Biak-na-Bato promulgated | |
December 14 | Pact of Biak-na-Bato between Aguinaldo and Governor Primo de Rivera signed | |
December 27 | Aguinaldo is self-exiled to Hong Kong following the Pact of Biak-na-Bato | |
1898 | February 8 | The Katipunan is revived by Emilio Jacinto and Feliciano Jocson |
April 11 | Basilio Augustín appointed Governor-General (1898) | |
April 24 | The US government promises support in exchange for his cooperation. Aguinaldo agrees | |
April 26 | The US declares war on Spain. | |
1 May | Commodore George Dewey attacks Manila | |
19 May | Aguinaldo and his companions return to the Philippines from exile | |
24 May | Aguinaldo proclaims a dictatorial government and issues two decrees which show his trust and reliance in US protection | |
June 12 | Aguinaldo proclaims Philippine Independence | |
June 23 | Aguinaldo changes the dictatorial government to revolutionary government. | |
July 15 | Aguinaldo creates a cabinet | |
July 15 | The Malolos Congress in established | |
July 17 | US reinforcements and troops arrive in the Philippines. | |
July 24 | Fermín Jáudenes becomes acting Governor-General (1898) | |
August 13 | Francisco Rizzo becomes acting Governor-General (1898) | |
August 13 | Wesley Merritt appointed Military Governor (1898) | |
August 14 | The Spanish surrender to the US after at mock battle of Manila | |
August 29 | Elwell S. Otis appointed Military Governor (1898–1900) | |
September | Diego de los Ríos becomes acting Governor-General (1898) | |
September 15 | The Malolos Congress meets and elects its officers. | |
October 11 | The Manila Times released its first issue. | |
December 10 | Spain and the US sign the Treaty of Paris. Article III provides for the cession of the Philippines to the US by Spain and the payment of 20 million dollars to Spain by the US. | |
December 21 | US President McKinley issues the Benevolent Assimilation Proclamation | |
1899 | January 20 | US President McKinley appoints the First Philippine Commission, known as the Schurman Commission |
January 21 | The Malolos Constitution is promulgated by Aguinaldo. | |
January 23 | The Malolos Republic government is inaugurated. Aguinaldo takes his oath of office as President. | |
February 4 | Hostilities break out between the Filipino and US forces. | |
February 6 | The US Senate ratifies the Treaty of Paris with Spain | |
March 4 | The Schurman Commission arrives in Manila | |
6 May | Aguinaldo creates a new cabinet | |
18 May | General Vicente Alvarez establishes the Republic of Zamboanga. | |
20 May | Aguinaldo's moves face opposition from Apolinario Mabini and Antonio Luna | |
June 5 | Antonio Luna killed | |
December 2 | Gregorio Del Pilar killed in the Battle of Tirad Pass | |
1900 | January 21 | The Schurman Commission returns to the US. |
February 2 | Manila Bulletin released its first issue. | |
March 16 | US President McKinley appoints the second Philippine Commission, known as the Taft Commission | |
5 May | Arthur MacArthur, Jr appointed Military Governor (1900–1901) | |
June 3 | The Taft Commission arrives in Manila | |
December 23 | Partido Liberal established |
20th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1901 | March 2 | The Army Appropriation Act, also known as the Spooner Amendment, is passed by the US Senate. |
March 23 | Aguinaldo is captured by US authorities. | |
April 1 | Aguinaldo takes an oath of allegiance to the US. | |
June 17 | El Colegio de San Beda established | |
July 4 | Adna Chaffee appointed as the last US Military Governor (1901–1902) | |
July 4 | A civil government is established in the Philippines with William Howard Taft as the first Civil Governor (1901–1904) | |
July 18 | The US organizes the Philippine Constabulary | |
August 28 | Silliman Institute, later known as Silliman University, is established as the first American university in the Philippines | |
September | The first Filipino members of the second Philippine Commission are appointed | |
September 27 | Guerillas, headed by the Filipino Captain Daza, attack the US military barracks in Balangiga, Samar | |
September 28 | Balangiga massacre occurs | |
October 20 | A U.S. Marine battalion arrives on Samar to conduct the March across Samar operation | |
November 4 | The Philippine Commission enacts the Sedition Law | |
December 14 | An earthquake estimated of magnitude 7.8 shakes Lucena City. | |
1902 | January | The first labor union of The Country, Union de Litografose Impresores de Filipinas, is organized. |
January 21 | The Philippine Commission calls for the organization of Public Schools in the Philippines. | |
March 30 | The US Marines leave Balangiga | |
April 16 | General Miguel Malvar surrenders to the US forces | |
May | Governor Taft negotiates with Pope Leo XIII the sale of the friar lands in the Philippines | |
May 2 | Macario Sakay establishes a second Tagalog Republic. | |
July 1 | The Philippine Organic Act was enacted. | |
July 1 | Cooper Act is passed by the US Senate. Philippine Assembly is established | |
July 4 | Americans proclaim the end of the Philippine–American War, however fighting continues | |
August 3 | The Foundation of Iglesia Filipina Independiente separated from Roman Catholic Church was proclaimed by The Union Obrera Democratica with Gregorio Aglipay as The 1st Obispo Maximo | |
September 17 | Pope Leo XIII formally bestows a Pontifical title on the University of Santo Tomas[16][17] | |
November 12 | Bandolerism Act passed by the Philippine Commission. All armed resistance against US rule are considered banditry | |
1903 | Governor Taft enunciates the policy of The Philippines for the Filipinos | |
June 1 | Moro Province was established. | |
1904 | February 1 | Luke Edward Wright appointed as Civil Governor (1904–1905) |
October 19 | The Manila Business School was founded and started its operation (later as the Philippine School of Commerce, 1908, then as the Philippine College of Commerce, 1952, and now the Polytechnic University of the Philippines). | |
1905 | November 3 | Henry Clay Ide appointed as Civil Governor (1905–1906) |
1906 | September 20 | James Francis Smith appointed as Civil Governor (1906–1909) |
December 3 | St. Scholastica's College established by the Benedictine Missionary Sisters of Tutzing | |
1907 | June 3 | Centro Escolar University established as Centro Escolar de Señoritas. |
June 30 | First Congressional Elections held | |
September 13 | Macario Sakay is executed by hanging, ending his Tagalog Republic. | |
October 16 | The First Philippine Assembly is convened. | |
1908 | June 18 | The University of the Philippines is established in Manila. |
1911 | January 27 | Mt Taal erupts, and kills 1,334 people |
June 16 | De La Salle University-Manila is founded as De La Salle College by the Brothers of Christian Schools. | |
December 28 | Tricentennial of the Royal and Pontifical University of Santo Tomas[16][17] | |
1913 | September 1 | Newton W. Gilbert appointed as acting Civil Governor (1913) |
October 6 | Francis Burton Harrison appointed as Civil Governor (1913–1921) | |
1914 | July 27 | Iglesia ni Cristo (largest independent church in Asia) is registered to the government. |
1916 | October 16 | The Jones Law is passed establishing an all-Filipino legislature |
October 16 | Manuel Quezon elected Senate President while Sergio Osmenna is elected as House Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of the Philippines | |
1917 | January 11 | The first cabinet of Filipinos under the US regime is organized. |
March 10 | Ambos Camarines Dissolved; Split into Camarines Norte and Camarines Sur. | |
1919 | September 19 | The silent film Dalagang Bukid by José Nepomuceno was released, the first film to be produced locally. |
1921 | March 5 | Charles Yeater appointed as acting Civil Governor (1921) |
October 14 | Leonard Wood appointed as Civil Governor (1921–1927) | |
1927 | August 7 | Eugene Allen Gilmore appointed as acting Civil Governor (1927) |
December 27 | Henry L. Stimson appointed as Civil Governor (1927–1929) | |
1929 | February 23 | Eugene Allen Gilmore appointed as acting Civil Governor (1929) |
July 8 | Dwight F. Davis appointed as Civil Governor (1929–1932) | |
1930 | November 30 | The Communist Party of the Philippines is formally established |
1932 | January 9 | George C. Butte appointed as acting Civil Governor (1932) |
February 29 | Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. appointed as Civil Governor (1932–1933) | |
June 20 | Adamson School of Industrial Chemistry (ASIC) later known as Adamson University was founded by George Lucas Adamson | |
October 26 | The Communist Party of the Philippines is declared illegal by the Supreme Court | |
1933 | July 15 | Frank Murphy appointed as the last Civil Governor of the Philippines (1933–1935) |
December 7 | Governor-General Frank Murphy granted the Right of Suffrage to the Filipino women. | |
1934 | March 24 | The Tydings-McDuffie Law, known as the Philippine Independence Law, is approved by US President Roosevelt. |
July 10 | 202 delegates are elected to the Constitutional Convention in accordance with the Tydings-McDuffie Law | |
July 30 | The Philippine Constitutional Convention is inaugurated | |
1935 | February 8 | The Constitutional Convention creates a new constitution |
February 15 | The Philippine Constitution is signed | |
May 2 | The Sakdalista uprising | |
14 May | The Philippine electorate ratifies the Constitution in a referendum | |
September 17 | Manuel Quezon elected President in the first Philippine Presidential elections | |
November 15 | The Philippine Commonwealth is inaugurated | |
November 15 | The Office of Civil Governor is abolished | |
1936 | March 25 | President Manuel L. Quezon issued Executive Order No. 23 which provided for the technical description and specifications of the Philippine national flag. |
1937 | February 3–7 | 33rd International Eucharistic Congress was held in Rizal Park, Manila, Philippines; first in Asia. |
1939 | July 15 | DZRH (KZRH) the first commercial radio station in the Philippines was founded by Samuel Gaches, the owner of H. E. Heacock Company, a department store company based in Escolta, Binondo, Manila. |
1941 | November 11 | Manuel Quezon re-elected as President |
December 8 | Start of the Japanese Invasion of the Philippines | |
December 20 | President Quezon, his family and the war cabinet move to Corregidor Island | |
December 26 | General MacArthur declares Manila an open city | |
December 28 | Filipino and US armies retreat to Bataan | |
December 30 | Manuel Quezon takes his oath of Office at the Corregidor Island | |
1942 | January 2 | Japanese troops enters Manila |
January 3 | Masaharu Homma appointed as Japanese Military Governor (1942) | |
January 3 | General Masaharu Homma declares the end of American Rule in the Philippines | |
January 3 | Martial Law declared | |
January 13 | All forms of opposition against the Japanese forces declared subject to death penalty | |
January 23 | An executive committee, composed of Filipinos, is formed by General Homma as a conduit of the military administration's policies and requirements. | |
February 17 | The Japanese Military Government issues an order adopting the Japanese educational system in The Country | |
February 20 | President Quezon and the war cabinet leave for the US | |
March 11 | General MacArthur leaves for Australia to take command of the South Western Pacific Area | |
March 13 | The Commonwealth government is moved to the US | |
March 29 | The People's Anti-Japanese Army or Hukbong Bayan Laban sa Hapon (Hukbalahap) is organized. | |
April | A pro-US resistance movement is organized, mainly to provide data to the US on enemy positions | |
April 9 | Bataan, under US commander General Edward King, is the last province that surrenders to the Japanese armies. | |
May 6 | Corregidor Island falls to Japanese forces | |
June 8 | Shizuichi Tanaka appointed as Japanese Military Governor (1942–1943) | |
June 14 | The Commonwealth of the Philippines becomes a member of the United Nations | |
December 30 | The Kalibapi is organized by the Japanese | |
1943 | May 28 | Shigenori Kuroda appointed as Japanese Military Governor (1943–1942) |
June 20 | Japanese Premier Hideki Tojo nominates an all Filipino 20 member Preparatory Commission for Philippine Independence | |
September 4 | The Philippine Preparatory Commission for Independence drafts a new Constitution which provides for a unicameral national assembly | |
September 20 | The 108 delegates to the National Assembly are chosen by the members of the Preparatory Commission for Philippine Independence. | |
September | Jose P. Laurel elected President of the Philippines by the National Assembly | |
October 14 | The puppet government is inaugurated. Laurel takes his oath of office | |
November | The Philippine economy collapses, the shortage of rice becomes serious. | |
1944 | May | The puppet government inaugurates the Green Revolution Movement. |
August 1 | Sergio Osmena assumes the Office of the President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines after the death of Manuel Quezon | |
September 21 | US forces raids Manila | |
September 26 | Tomoyuki Yamashita appointed as Japanese Military Governor (1944–1945) | |
October 20 | General MacArthur lands in Palo, Leyte, accompanied by President Sergio Osmena and US troops | |
October 23 | The Commonwealth government of the Philippines is re-established in Tacloban, Leyte | |
December 8 | Pro-Japanese Philippine generals Pio Duran and Benigno Ramos organize the Makapilis | |
1945 | January 30 | Raid at Cabanatuan: 121 American soldiers and 800 Filipino guerrillas free 813 American Prisoners of war from the Japanese-held camp in the city of Cabanatuan in the Philippines. |
February 4 | US troops enter Manila | |
February 22 | Hukbalahap troop leaders arrested by the US forces | |
February 24 | The Battle of Manila ends. The Japanese surrender to the combined US and Filipino troops | |
February 27 | MacArthur hands over Malacanang Palace to Osmena. | |
March 3 | The US and Filipino troops recaptured Manila. | |
March 16 | Establishment of the Congress of Labor Organizations (CLO), a federation of labor organizations organized by former leaders of the Hukbo ng Bayan Laban sa mga Hapon (Hukbalahap).[26] | |
March 22 | The families of pro-Japanese President Laurel and Speaker Aquino leave The Country for Japan to seek refuge | |
June 5 | The Congress elected in 1941 convenes for the first time | |
July 5 | General MacArthur announces the liberation of the Philippines | |
August 6 | The American forces drop an atomic bomb over Hiroshima, Japan. | |
August 9 | The American forces an atomic bomb over Nagasaki, Japan. | |
August 15 | The Empire of Japan accepts defeat | |
August 17 | Philippines President José P. Laurel issues an Executive Proclamation putting an end to the Second Philippine Republic, thus ending to his term as President of the Philippines. | |
September 2 | The final official Japanese Instrument of Surrender is accepted by the Supreme Allied Commander, General Douglas MacArthur, and Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz for the United States, and delegates from Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, The Netherlands, China, and others from a Japanese delegation led by Mamoru Shigemitsu, on board the American battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay. | |
September 12 | Jose P. Laurel is arrested by the US army | |
October 24 | The United Nations is founded by ratification of its Charter, by 29 nations. | |
December | Manuel Roxas separates from the Nacionalista Party of Sergio Osmena Sr and joins the Liberal Party | |
1946 | April 23 | Manuel Roxas wins in the last Presidential Election under the Commonwealth |
July 4 | The United States recognizes the Independence of the Republic of the Philippines | |
September 30 | The Amended Tenancy Act is promulgated. | |
1947 | January 28 | President Roxas issues an amnesty proclamation to collaborators |
March 6 | HUKBALAHAP declared illegal | |
March 14 | The Treaty of General Relations between Philippines and United States was signed. | |
April 15 | President Roxas dies from a heart attack at Clark Air Field; Vice President Quirino Assumes the Office of President | |
April 17 | Elpidio Quirino takes his oath of office as President of the Philippines | |
September 8 | The Philippine representative to the Far Eastern Commission, Carlos P. Romulo, signs the Japanese Peace Treaty | |
1949 | April 28 | Aurora Quezon (widow of Pres. Manuel Quezon) was ambushed by the Hukbalahap in Bongabon, Nueva Ecija. |
1950 | August 31 | President Quirino appoints Ramon Magsaysay as Secretary of the Department of National Defense |
The Philippines joins the Korean War, sending over 7,000 troops under the United Nations command. | ||
1951 | August | The National Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL) is established |
August 30 | The Mutual Defense Treaty between Philippines and United States was signed. | |
October 8 | Nicasio “Asiong” Salonga, branded as Tondo’s Public Enemy No. 1 and the kingpin of Manila, was killed during a drinking spree when he was shot by Ernesto Reyes, a henchman of Salonga’s rival and also-notorious gang leader Carlos “Totoy Golem” Capistrano.[27] | |
1953 | November 10 | Ramon Magsaysay is elected President of the Republic of the Philippines |
December 30 | Magsaysay takes his oath of office | |
1954 | July 21 | The Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty is signed in Manila, creating the South East Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO) |
September 2 | At least 82 people were killed in a train crash in Negros Occidental. | |
December 15 | The Laurel-Langley Agreement is signed | |
1957 | March 17 | President Magsaysay dies in a plane crash; Vice-President Carlos P. Garcia assumes the presidency |
November 14 | Carlos P. Garcia elected President of the Republic of the Philippines | |
1958 | August 28 | The Filipino first policy is promulgated |
1960 | February 8 | Birth of Benigno Aquino III, President of the Philippines. |
1961 | January 18 | Baguio City experience cold at 6.3-degree Celsius, the country's lowest temperature ever recorded. |
December 7 | Diosdado Macapagal elected President of the Republic of the Philippines. | |
December 30 | Macapagal takes his oath of office | |
1962 | May 12 | Independence Day is changed to June 12 by Diosdado Macapagal |
1963 | April 12 | Death of Felix Y. Manalo, founder of Iglesia ni Cristo at age of 76 |
July 28 | A total of 60 people, including 24 Filipino boy scouts and scout officials en route to Athens, Greece for the 11th World Jamboree, perished when the United Arab Airlines Flight 869 crashed into the Arabian Sea a few miles off Bombay, India.[28] | |
August 8 | Diosdado Macapagal Signed the Agricultural Land Reform Code | |
1965 | November 9 | Ferdinand Marcos elected President of the Republic of the Philippines |
December 30 | Ferdinand Marcos takes his oath of office | |
1966 | With the enactment of Republic Act No. 4695, the huge old Mountain Province was abolished and split into four provinces: Benguet, Mountain Province, Kalinga-Apayao and Ifugao. | |
1967 | August 8 | ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nation) was formed. |
1968 | March 18 | Jabidah massacre |
December 26 | A new Communist Party of the Philippines established by Jose Maria Sison. | |
1969 | March 29 | Jose Maria Sison formally organizes the military arm of the Communist Party of the Philippines, The New People's Army |
May 11 | Tuguegarao City in Cagayan experienced heat at 42.2 degrees Celsius, the country's highest temperature ever recorded. | |
July 19 | Miss Philippines Gloria Diaz was crowned Miss Universe 1969. | |
November 11 | Ferdinand Marcos re-elected President of the Republic of the Philippines | |
1970 | January | First Quarter Storm begins. |
November 17 | Elections for 315 members of a Constitutional Convention held. | |
November 27 | Pope Paul VI makes his first papal visit in the Philippines, but survived an assassination attempt by Benjamín Mendoza y Amor Flores at Manila International Airport. | |
1971 | February 1–9 | Diliman commune |
June 1 | The Constitutional Convention assembles to rewrite the 1935 Constitution. The Convention elects former President Carlos Garcia as its head. | |
June 14 | Garcia dies and former President Diosdado Macapagal takes over the top position at the Convention. | |
August 21 | Plaza Miranda bombed during the election campaign of the Liberal Party | |
August 22 | President Marcos suspends the Writ of Habeas Corpus | |
October 10 | Leonardo “Nardong Putik” Manecio, one of the most notorious gangsters and dubbed as Cavite’s Public Enemy No. 1 was killed in Imus after NBI agents engaged him in a highway shootout.[27] | |
1972 | Suspicious bombing incidents increase all over The Country . The MNLF launches its campaign for the independence of the Muslim provinces. | |
September 21 | President Marcos signs the Martial Law Edict (at that time not publicly announced). | |
September 22 | Assassination attempt on Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile | |
Marcos places the entire country under martial law | ||
September 23 | The implementation of martial law is officially announced | |
Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr. is arrested | ||
September 26 | The whole country is proclaimed a land reform area and an Agrarian Reform Program is decreed. | |
October 21 | Marcos passes the Tenant's Emancipation Patent | |
October 21 | The first major armed defiance of martial law takes place in Lanao del Sur | |
October 22 | The battle between the MNLF and the government troops ends with the latter regaining control of the city. | |
November 29 | The Constitutional Convention passes the new Constitution of the Philippines. | |
1973 | Misuari leaves The Country for Libya to solicit armed support from Muslim countries for the war in Mindanao. | |
January 10 | A plebiscite referendum is held among the citizens' assemblies to ratify the new Constitution | |
January 15 | Infamous Chinese drug lord Lim Seng faced his public execution by firing squad at a lot behind the Libingan ng mga Bayani in Fort Bonifacio,[29] the country's first and last of its kind in the post-war Philippine history. | |
April | The National Democratic Front (NDF), the united front organization of the Communist Party of the Philippines, is formally organized. | |
July 21 | Miss Philippines Margarita Moran was crowned Miss Universe 1973. | |
July 27 | Marcos' term as President extended by virtue of a referendum | |
November 22 | Dissolution of Empire Province of Cotabato. | |
1974 | February 27 | Presidential appointments to local elective positions declared legal by virtue of another referendum |
March 11 | Japanese lieutenant Hiroo Onoda, one of the longest-remaining Japanese holdouts, formally surrendering his sword to President Marcos at Malacañang Palace after continuing to fight for 29 years in the Lubang Island.[29] | |
December 1 | Jose Sison's essay entitled Specific Characteristics of Our People's War published | |
1975 | October 2 | Thrilla in Manila |
1976 | January 4 | New people's Army Spokesman Satur Ocampo arrested |
August 17 | An earthquake of 7.8 magnitude and a following tsunami (flood wave) kills 8,000 people on and off the coast of Mindanao. | |
August 26 | Kumander Dante of the New People's Army arrested | |
October 16 | Martial Law allowed to exted by virtue of a Plebicte | |
December 23 | Tripoli Agreement signed | |
1977 | January 20 | The Armed Forces of the Philippines enters into a ceasefire agreement with the MNLF. |
March 4 | President Marcos issues a decree creating the autonomous Bangsa Moro Islamic Government | |
November 10 | The CPP head Jose Maria Sison arrested | |
November 25 | The Military Commission found Benigno Aquino, Jr. guilty of all charges and sentenced him to death by firing squad. but he escaped execution. | |
December 16 | A referendum is held, the result of which again empowers the President to continue in office, and to become Prime Minister as well. | |
1978 | Rodolfo Salas takes over the leadership of the Communist Party of the Philippines. | |
April 8 | Members of the Interim Batasang Pambansa are elected. | |
1979 | July 30 | Eat Bulaga!, the longest running noon-time variety show in the Philippines, premiered on RPN. It was also aired on ABS-CBN from 1989 to 1995 and on GMA Network since 1995. |
1981 | January 18 | Martial law lifted. |
February 17–21 | Pope John Paul II visited the Philippines for his first papal visit. | |
June 16 | Philippine general election and referendum, 1981 (Ferdinand Marcos re-elected to a third term). | |
June 30 | Finance Minister Cesar Virata is elected Prime Minister by the Batasang Pambansa | |
November 17 | Accident during the construction of the Manila Film Center, 169 were killed. | |
1983 | August 21 | Benigno Aquino, Jr. assassinated |
1984 | May 14 | Philippine parliamentary election, 1984 |
1985 | June 12 | New Design Banknotes Released |
December 2 | Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Chief of staff General Fabian Ver and 25 others were acquitted. | |
December 9 | Philippine Daily Inquirer released its first issue. | |
1986 | February 7 | Philippine presidential election, 1986 |
February 9 | Thirty computer technicians of the Commission on Elections walked out of their jobs after they were ordered to cheat the election returns in favor of President Marcos.[26] | |
February 16 | Batasang Pambansa declared Marcos and Arturo Tolentino as President and Vice-President, respectively. Corazon Aquino, widow of Benigno Aquino, Jr., expressed protest. | |
February 22–25 | EDSA Revolution ousts President Marcos; Corazon Aquino becomes president
| |
March 25 | Aquino abolishes Interim Batasang Pambansa and the constitution and adopts Freedom Constitution. | |
July 28 | The Philippine Star released its first issue. | |
1987 | January 22 | Mendiola massacre occurred, 13 people were killed |
February 2 | Aquino adopts a new constitution by separating the House of Representatives and the Senate from the Interim Batasang Pambansa. | |
February 11 | Manila Standard (now The Standard) released its first issue. | |
March 2 | TV Patrol, the longest-running Filipino spoken evening newscast, starts its broadcast on ABS-CBN. | |
May 11 | Philippine legislative election, 1987 | |
August 28–29 | Coup attempt takes place when rebel soldiers made a threatened reprisal against Aquino and ended in a gunfight with 50 people killed and 200 wounded as Government troops fizzled the plot. | |
October 18 | Canonization of San Lorenzo Ruiz, the first Filipino saint | |
December 20 | The passenger ferry MV Doña Paz and the oil tanker MT Vector are collided and sank in Tablas Strait, killing 4,341 passengers and crew. The collision made as the deadliest peace-time maritime disaster of the 20th century. | |
1988 | October 17 | Interior Bases Agreement was signed by the Philippines and United States. |
1989 | August 1 | Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao region was first created through Republic Act No. 6734 (the Organic Act). |
September 28 | Death of Ferdinand Marcos | |
December 1–9 | The most serious coup d'etat against the government of Philippine President Corazon Aquino was staged by members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines belonging to the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) and soldiers loyal to former President Ferdinand Marcos led by Colonel Gregorio Honasan, General Edgardo Abenina, and retired General Jose Ma. Zumel. | |
1990 | July 16 | The Luzon earthquake struck with a surface wave magnitude of 7.8. The earthquake caused damage within an area of about 20,000 square kilometers, stretching from the mountains of the Cordillera Administrative Region and through the Central Luzon region. |
1991 | January 29 | Merger of the Philippine Constabulary with the Integrated National Police to form the Philippine National Police. |
June 15 | Mount Pinatubo erupts in what will be the second largest terrestrial eruption of the 20th century; the final death toll tops 800. | |
June 30 | The massacre of Estrellita, Carmela, and Jennifer Vizconde. | |
July 13 | Hultman-Chapman murder case | |
September 16 | Senate of the Philippines rejects renewal of U.S military bases in the Philippines | |
November 4–5 | Tropical Storm Uring lashes into Eastern Visayas, leaving 8,000 people dead as a result of widespread flooding in the coastal city of Ormoc, Leyte. | |
1992 | May 11 | Philippine general election, 1992 (Fidel V. Ramos is elected) |
1993 | June 28 | Sarmienta-Gomez Rape-slay case. |
September 11 | Ferdinand Marcos remains was laid to rest in Batac, Ilocos Norte. | |
September 24 | Biggest corruption case in the Philippines. Former first lady Imelda Marcos was convicted for the first time of corruption and sentenced to 24 years in prison.[26] | |
1994 | March 29 | The Philippines gets connected to the Internet. |
November 15 | Mindoro Earthquake | |
1995 | January 6 | Discovery of Bojinka plot. |
January 10–15 | Pope John Paul II visited the Philippines for the World Youth Day held in Manila. | |
March 17 | Flor Contemplacion was executed in Singapore. | |
April 30 | President Ramos inaugurated the opening of Subic International Airport (formerly a United States military base). This indicates growth after the removal of military bases in the country. | |
May 8 | Philippine general election, 1995 | |
November 27 | The construction of the Skyway project was initiated, the biggest infrastructure project in the country that was intended to ease the flow of traffic in Metro Manila. | |
1996 | March 18 | Fire razes Ozone Disco, killing 162 guests including college graduating students and 95 more injured. |
March 24 | Marcopper mining disaster | |
August 4 | Onyok Velasco won the silver medal after he defeated the enemy in the semifinal round (boxing). But he lost a gold medal after defeated by the Bulgarian at the end of 1996 Atlanta Olympics. However, Velasco returned in the country as a hero and received over ₱10-million total prize. | |
September 2 | A permanent peace agreement is signed at the Malacañan Palace between the Government of the Philippines and the Moro National Liberation Front. | |
November 24–25 | 8th Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit was held in Subic. | |
1997 | July | Asian financial crisis |
1998 | May 11 | Philippine general election, 1998 (Joseph Estrada is elected) |
June 12 | Centennial of Philippines Independence | |
1999 | February 5 | Leo Echegaray was the first Filipino to be executed by lethal injection at the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City. |
2000 | January 1 | The Philippines celebrates the new 2000 millennium nationwide. |
March 15 | President Estrada declares an "all-out-war" against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). | |
April 19 | Air Philippines Flight 541 Boeing 737-2H4 crashed in Island Garden City of Samal, Davao del Norte, killing 131, the worst air disaster in the Philippine history. | |
July 10 | Payatas landslide | |
November 13 | President Estrada impeached by House of Representatives | |
December 7 | The Senate formally initiated the proceedings in impeachment case against President Estrada. Chief Justice Hilario Davide, Jr. presided the trial. | |
December 30 | Rizal Day bombings |
21st century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
2001 | January 16 | After 11 senators voted not to open the second envelope, which containing the documents against President Estrada, the prosecutors walked out. |
January 17–20 | Second EDSA Revolution lasted 4 days.
| |
April 30 | EDSA III | |
May 14 | Philippine general election, 2001 | |
2002 | March 5 | Mindanao earthquake |
2003 | July 27 | Oakwood mutiny |
2004 | May 10 | Philippine general election, 2004 (Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo elected to a six-year term) |
November 16 | Hacienda Luisita massacre occurred, 14 were killed. | |
2005 | June 27 | Hello Garci scandal (Legitimacy of declared election winners questioned) |
2006 | February 17 | Southern Leyte mudslide |
February 24 | A state of emergency was declared in February in response to coup rumours. | |
2007 | May 14 | Philippine general election, 2007 |
September 12 | The Sandiganbayan convicted former president Joseph Estrada for plunder and sentenced him to reclusion perpetua while acquitting him and his co-accused on other charges. | |
October 19 | Glorietta mall explosion | |
November 13 | An explosion at the House of Representatives building in Quezon City kills four people. | |
November 29 | Manila Peninsula mutiny | |
2008 | May 16 | Eight employees and a security guard of a Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation (RCBC) branch in Cabuyao, Laguna were killed in a bank robbery. |
June 21 | The MV Princess of the Stars, owned by Sulpicio Lines that carried 626 passengers and 121 crew members, stalled in rough seas near Sibuyan Island. | |
2009 | January 15 | Three International Committee of the Red Cross volunteers were kidnapped by the rebel group Abu Sayyaf |
August 1 | Death of former president Corazon Aquino. | |
August 31 | Death of Eraño Manalo, Executive Minister of the Iglesia ni Cristo. | |
September 26 | Great Flood because of Typhoon Ondoy | |
November 23 | Maguindanao massacre | |
2010 | May 10 | The 2010 Philippine general elections, also the first national computerized election in the Philippine history, took place. |
June 9 | President-elect Benigno Aquino III won the Presidential election, being the 15th President of the Philippines. | |
June 30 | Inauguration of the President-elect Benigno Aquino III took place, officially declaring him as the 15th President of the Philippines. | |
August 23 | The hostage crisis in Manila took place, killing eight Hong Kong holidaymakers. | |
October 16 | Typhoon Juan, officially as Typhoon Megi, hits northeastern Luzon at Sierra Madre, creating widespread damage over Luzon. (to October 18) | |
December 14 | Vizconde Massacre Case Finished. Result Webb's Freedom | |
December 16 | Philippine New Banknotes Released | |
2011 | January 24 | UST Quadricentennial Celebration |
July 26 | The Heroism of 12-year-old Schoolgirl Janela Lelis. | |
November 18 | Former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo was arrested. | |
December 12 | 188 members of the House of Representatives signed an impeachment complaint against Chief Justice Renato Corona. | |
2012 | May 29 | 20 of 23 Senators voted to find Chief Justice Renato Corona guilty on Article II of the Articles of Impeachment filed against him, removing him from office. |
October 15 | The Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro is signed which seeks for the creation of a new autonomous political entity, Bangsamoro replacing the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao. | |
October 21 | Canonization of San Pedro Calungsod | |
2013 | May 13 | Philippine general election, 2013 |
May 15 | The Enhanced Basic Education Act of 2013, commonly known as K–12 program was signed. | |
July 27 | The United Federated States of Bangsamoro Republik (UFSBR) declares it independence from the Philippines | |
September 28 | The UFSBR ceases to exists as it is defeated in the Zamboanga City crisis. | |
October 15 | At 8:12 a.m. (PST) in the morning, the Bohol province suffered a severe earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 Ms. Its epicenter was located at a depth of 33 kilometres (21 mi), 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) east of Carmen, Bohol, and 629 kilometres (391 mi) from the Philippines' capital, Manila. The quake was felt as far as Davao City, a city located in the island of Mindanao. Ninety-nine were reported dead while 276 people were injured. It was the deadliest earthquake in the Philippines in 23 years. The energy of the quake released was equivalent to 32 Hiroshima bombs dropped in Hiroshima, Japan during the World War II. | |
November 8 | Typhoon Haiyan known in the Philippines as "Yolanda" hits Regions MIMAROPA, Western Visayas, Central Visayas, and Eastern Visayas resulting of 6,201 deaths, 27,665 injured, 1,785 missing and ₱138,552,546.55 (US$3,208,322.78) total damages. | |
2014 | February 15 | More than 519,221 members of the Iglesia ni Cristo joined the Worldwide Walk For Those Affected by Typhoon Yolanda held in Manila and in selected sites in the Philippines and abroad. |
March 27 | The Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro was signed. | |
May 23 | The Philippines and Indonesia signed a maritime treaty that draws the boundary of the two countries' overlapping Exclusive Economic Zone in Mindanao and Celebes seas. | |
July 27 | The Centennial Celebration of the Iglesia ni Cristo. | |
July 27 | Philippines marks a milestone in its population growth identifying the birth of a baby girl in a Manila hospital as the 100 millionth Filipino. | |
September 10 | President Aquino III lead the handover of the draft of the Bangsamoro Basic Law to the Senate and House leaders in a historical turnover ceremony at the Malacaňang. | |
November 20 | Ozone Disco Club fire Case Finished. Result 7 officials of Quezon City convicted. | |
December 6 | Typhoon Ruby, officially as Typhoon Hagupit hits Western Visayas, and Eastern Visayas, creating widespread damage over Visayas. | |
December 29 | BSP announces demonetizing the old Philippine Banknotes (issued in 1985). | |
2015 | January 15–19 | The Papal visit of Pope Francis in the Philippines. |
January 25 | 44 PNP-SAF Officers were killed in Maguindanao. | |
February 25 | The AFP declared its all-out offensive campaign against the MILF break away group, the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters. | |
April 14 | Death of Ameril Umbra Kato, the founding leader of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters. | |
April 29 | The execution of the convicted Filipina drug mule Mary Jane Veloso was postponed. | |
May 3 | Manny Pacquiao was defeated by Floyd Mayweather Jr. in the so-called Battle For Greatness in MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada. | |
May 3 | Abdul Basit Usman, the most wanted bomb expert in the country, was killed by a MILF group unit in Guindulungan, Maguindanao. | |
May 13 | Kentex Manufacturing slippers factory fire occurred. Result 72 employees were killed. | |
June 5 | President Benigno Aquino III signed Executive Order 183 that created the Negros Island Region. | |
June 28 | Death of Kumander Parago, the top commander of the New People’s Army. | |
July 23 | The Iglesia ni Cristo has expelled Tenny and Angel Manalo. | |
July 27 | President Benigno Aquino III takes sixth State of the Nation Address. | |
August 27–31 | Iglesia ni Cristo members staged demonstrations near the DOJ office and later in EDSA. | |
October 18 | Typhoon Lando officially as Typhoon Koppu hits northern and central Luzon, creating widespread damage and floods over Luzon. | |
November 18–19 | APEC Philippines 2015 was held, which concluded with the APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting. | |
December 14–19 | Typhoon Nona devastates parts of the Philippines, killing 41 and cost ₱2 billion in damages. | |
December 21 | Miss Philippines Pia Alonzo Wurtzbach was crowned Miss Universe 2015. | |
December 23 | The Philippines became the first Asian country to approve the sale of the world's first dengue vaccine, the Dengvaxia. | |
December 24 | Death of Letty Jimenez Magsanoc, editor-in-chief of the Philippine Daily Inquirer. | |
2016 | January 24–31 | 51st International Eucharistic Congress was held in Cebu City, Philippines. |
February 10 | The National Mapping and Resource Information Authority announces that it has documented more than 400 additional islands. | |
February 29 | Re-interment of the remains of the late former President Elpidio Quirino was held in Libingan ng mga Bayani on his 60th death anniversary. | |
March 23 | Diwata-1 was launched to the International Space Station aboard the Cygnus spacecraft on a supply mission. | |
April 1 | At least 3 are killed and several others were wounded when police dispersed a farmers' protest action in Kidapawan. | |
April 9 | 18 soldiers and 5 Abu Sayyaf bandits are killed during a clash in Tipo-Tipo, Basilan. |
See also
References
- ↑ Adib Majul, Cesar (1999). Muslims in the Philippines. University of the Philippines Press. ISBN 971-542-188-1.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Central and Eastern Visayas Dagahi and Eugenio S. Daza, msc.edu.ph, retrieved 2008-07-04
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Señor Enrique, Wish You Were Here, retrieved 2008-07-14
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Philippine History Group of Los Angeles, Alfonso S. Quilala Jr., retrieved 2008-07-17
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Electronic Kabalen, J. Reylan Bustos Viray – JOE MARK, retrieved 2008-07-17
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Bartleby, The Philippines 1500–1800, retrieved 2008-07-04
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Ang edukasyon sa panahon ng mga Kastila "The Filipino Corner" Retrieved October 27, 2012
- ↑ The First Hundred Years of the Ateneo de Manila Ateneo de Manila University website May 1, 2012
- 1 2 Geographical History Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila website May 1, 2012
- ↑ Grant to the seminary of Santa Potenciana, 1617. Retrieved May 30, 2012
- ↑ Real Colegio de Santa Potenciana. Retrieved May 30, 2012
- ↑ Perez Dasmarinas, Luis. Letters from Luis Perez Dasmarinas to Filipe II. In The Philippine Islands, 1493–1898. Ohio: A.H. Clark Company, 1903-9. Vol. 9
- ↑ About USC: University of San Carlos University of San Carlos website Retrieved 2012-04-24
- ↑ No contest: UST is oldest university Inquirer.net Retrieved May 30, 2012
- ↑ UST is oldest, period Varsitarian website Retrieved May 30, 2012
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Lim-Pe, Josefina (1973). The University of Santo Tomas in the Twentieth Century. University of Santo Tomas Press, Manila. pp. 1–19.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 History of the University of Santo Tomas University of Santo Tomas website Retrieved May 30, 2012
- ↑ History of Colegio de San Juan de Letran Colegio de San Juan de Letran website Retrieved May 30, 2012
- ↑ Colegio de San Juan de Letran jobstreet.com Retrieved May 30, 2012
- ↑ A Knight's Tale – The Lance, June 2005
- ↑ Santa Isabel College Santa Isabel College website Retrieved May 28, 2012
- ↑ Colegio de Santa Isabel Intramuros Wordpress.com Retrieved October 27, 2012
- 1 2 The first university The Philippine Star Retrieved May 28, 2012
- ↑ History of Colegio de San Jose / San Jose Seminary San Jose Seminary website Retrieved May 12, 2012
- ↑ Fr. Miguel A. Bernad, S.J.: "Colegio de San José (1601–2001): A Quick Survey of the Turbulent 400-year History of an Educational Institution" Monk's Hobbit May 1, 2012
- 1 2 3 "100 significant events in Philippine history". Retrieved February 6, 2016.
- 1 2 "9 Extremely Notorious Pinoy Gangsters". Retrieved February 6, 2016.
- ↑ "10 Haunting Last Pictures Taken in Philippine History". Retrieved February 6, 2016.
- 1 2 "10 Lesser-Known Photos from Martial Law Years That Will Blow You Away". Retrieved February 6, 2016.
Further reading
- Benjamin Vincent (1910), "Philippine Isles", Haydn's Dictionary of Dates (25th ed.), London: Ward, Lock & Co. – via Hathi Trust
- David Lea and Colette Milward, ed. (2001). "Philippines". Political Chronology of South East Asia and Oceania. Political Chronologies of the World. Europa Publications. pp. 157–175. ISBN 978-1-135-35659-0.
- Artemio R. Guillermo (2012). "Chronology". Historical Dictionary of the Philippines. Maryland, USA: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7246-2.
External links
- BBC News. "Philippines Profile: Timeline".
- Detailed timeline
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