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Baldomero Aguinaldo

Filipino revolutionary leader (1869–1915)


Filipino revolutionary leader (1869–1915)

FieldValue
nameBaldomero Aguinaldo
imageBaldomero Aguinaldo.jpg
captionBaldomero Aguinaldo in 1899
nicknameBaldo
officeMinister/Secretary of War and Public Works
term_startJuly 15, 1898
term_endMay 6, 1899
presidentEmilio Aguinaldo
predecessorEmiliano Riego de Dios
successorMariano Trías
office1Secretary of Treasury
term_start1November 2, 1897
term_end11899
appointer1Emilio Aguinaldo
predecessor1Position created
successor1Hugo Ilagan
office2Director of Finance
term_start2April 1897
term_end2November 1897
appointer2Emilio Aguinaldo
predecessor2Position created
successor2Mariano Trías
birth_date
birth_placeCavite El Viejo, Cavite, Captaincy General of the Philippines
death_date
death_placeMalate, Manila, Philippine Islands
resting_placeBaldomero Aguinaldo Shrine, Kawit, Cavite, Philippines
alma_materUniversity of Santo Tomas
allegianceFirst Philippine Republic
[[File:Flag of the Biak-na-Bato.svg23px]] Republic of Biak-na-Bato
[[File:Flag of Katipunan.svg22px]] Katipunan (Magdalo)
branch[[File:Seal of the Philippine Army (1897).svg23px]] Philippine Revolutionary Army
serviceyears1896–1901
rank[[Image:PR Teniente General SE.svg25pxGeneral]] Lieutenant General
battles
awardsCruz Roja del Merito Militar (Red Cross for Military Honor)
spousePetrona Reyes
children2
  • Philippine Revolution
    • Battle of Imus
    • Battle of Binakayan-Dalahican
  • Philippine–American War

Baldomero Aguinaldo y Baloy (February 27, 1869 – February 4, 1915) was a leader of the Philippine Revolution. He was the first cousin of Emilio Aguinaldo and the grandfather of Cesar Virata, a former prime minister in the 1980s.

Early life

Baldomero Aguinaldo was born in Cavite el Viejo (now Kawit), Cavite. He was the son of Cipriano Aguinaldo y Jamir and Silveria Baloy. His father was the son of Eugenio Aguinaldo y Kajigas and Maria Jamir.

Education

Aguinaldo studied at the Ateneo Municipal de Manila and then law at the University of Santo Tomas, both in Manila. He was still a law student during the outbreak of the Philippine Revolution. He obtained a law degree, but failed to take the bar examination. Unable to practice law, he became a farmer.

Career

Aguinaldo organized, along with his cousin Emilio, the Magdalo chapter of the Katipunan in Kawit. He became president of the council. In the early days of hostilities, he always stayed at the side of his cousin Emilio. He fought in several bloody battles. He also led the Magdalo faction to the Katipunan which had its headquarters in Kawit, Cavite.

Aguinaldo's knowledge of the law and administrative procedures made him a valuable asset to the revolutionary government. He was appointed to several cabinet positions, and was a signer of two important documents: The Biak-na-bato Constitution, and the Pact of Biak-na-Bato.

During the Philippine–American War, Aguinaldo fought again, becoming commanding general of the revolutionary forces in the southern Luzon provinces. When hostilities ended in 1901, he retired to private life.

He held many various positions in the Aguinaldo Cabinet as Director of Finance, Secretary of Treasury, and Minister of National Defense. During the American occupation, he became the President of the Philippine Veterans Association.

Personal life

He was married to Doña Petrona Reyes with 2 children: Leonor and Aureliano. Leonor was the mother of former Prime Minister Cesar Virata. Aguinaldo was a member of the Philippine Independent Church (IFI, also known as the Aglipayan Church) as he saw independence from the Roman Catholic Church as a source of national pride. He was elected President of the Comite de Caballeros ("Gentlemen's Committee") of the Philippine Independent Church in Kawit. He had initially organized a local lay organization within the IFI in Binakayan, Kawit in 1904 which later became the splinter group Iglesia de la Libertad in 1938 led by its priest and bishop, Hermogenes Ramirez and Jose Gamad, respectively. Both clerics later returned to IFI.

Death

Baldomero suffered from heart failure and rheumatism at the age of 45 in Malate, Manila. Emilio Aguinaldo, Felipe Agoncillo, Mariano Ponce, and Gregorio Aglipay were among those who paid their respects at his wake, which lasted nearly two weeks. On February 21, 1915, a large audience assembled at the Manila North Cemetery for his funeral; numerous groups such as the Guías Nacionales, Batallón escolar del Liceo de Manila, Guerrilleros Filipinos, and newspaper officials were there.

Tombstone marking the grave of Aguinaldo and his wife Petrona

His remains were later interred at his family's home in Kawit, which has since been converted into a museum commemorating his life and operated by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines.

References

References

  1. "Previous Treasurers".
  2. "Gen. Baldomero Aguinaldo Shrine {{!}} Cavite".
  3. Gonzales, Enrique. (1968). "The Baptismal Rites in Filipino Christian Churches". [[Ateneo de Manila University]].
  4. (1964). "The Aglipayan Churches and the Census of 1960". Philippine Studies.
  5. "Museo ni Baldomero Aguinaldo".
  6. Sonnichsen, A., 1901, Ten Months a Captive Among Filipinos, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons
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