Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
law

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Benigno Aquino Sr.

Filipino politician (1894–1947)

Benigno Aquino Sr.

Summary

Filipino politician (1894–1947)

FieldValue
nameBenigno Aquino Sr.
imageBenigno Simeón Aquino Sr.jpg
captionAquino Sr. in 1941
office6th Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines
1st Speaker of the National Assembly of the Second Philippine Republic
term_startSeptember 25, 1943
term_endFebruary 2, 1944
predecessorJosé Yulo
successorJose Zulueta
office2Member of the National Assembly of the Second Philippine Republic from Tarlac's at-large district
term_start2September 25, 1943
term_end2February 2, 1944
alongside2Sergio L. Aquino
office3Commissioner of the Interior
1blankname3Presiding Officer, PEC
1namedata3Jorge B. Vargas
term_start31942
term_end31942
successor3José P. Laurel
office4Secretary of Agriculture and Commerce
president4Manuel L. Quezon
term_start41938
term_end41940
predecessor4Eulogio Rodriguez
successor4Rafael Alunan Sr.
office5Member of the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of the Philippines from Tarlac's 2nd district
term_start5June 11, 1945
term_end5May 25, 1946
predecessor5Jose Urquico
as Member of the National Assembly
successor5Alejandro Simpaoco
office6Member of the National Assembly of the Philippines from Tarlac's 2nd district
term_start6September 16, 1935
term_end6December 30, 1938
predecessor6Feliciano B. Gardiner
as Representative
successor6Jose Urquico
office7Senate Majority Leader
term_start7July 16, 1931
term_end7June 5, 1934
1blankname7Senate President
1namedata7Manuel L. Quezon
predecessor7José P. Laurel
successor7Claro M. Recto
office8Senator of the Philippines from the 3rd Senatorial District
term_start8June 5, 1928
term_end8June 5, 1934
Served with:
Teodoro Sandiko (1928–1931)
Sotero Baluyut (1931–1934)
predecessor8Luis Morales
successor8Hermogenes Concepcion
office9Member of the Philippine House of Representatives from Tarlac's 2nd district
term_start9June 3, 1919
term_end9June 5, 1928
predecessor9Cayetano Rivera
successor9Jose G. Domingo
office10Vice President of the Philippines
status10De facto
term_start10January 15, 1944
term_end10August 17, 1945
president10José P. Laurel
birth_nameBenigno Simeón Aquino y Quiambao
birth_date
birth_placeMurcia, Tarlac, Tarlac, Captaincy General of the Philippines, Spanish East Indies (now Concepcion, Tarlac, Philippines)
death_date
death_placeManila, Philippines
nationalityFilipino
partyNacionalista (1919–1942; 1945–1947)
otherpartyKALIBAPI (1942–1945)
parentsServillano Aquino (father)
Guadalupe Quiambao (mother)
spouse{{plainlist
* {{marriageMaria Urquico19161928reasonher death}}
children11 (incl. Ninoy, Butz and Tessie)
relativesAquino family
alma_materUniversity of Santo Tomas (LL.B)
occupationFarmer, politician
professionLawyer, civil servant
footnotes

1st Speaker of the National Assembly of the Second Philippine Republic as Member of the National Assembly as Representative Served with: Teodoro Sandiko (1928–1931) Sotero Baluyut (1931–1934) Guadalupe Quiambao (mother)

Benigno Simeón Aquino y Quiambao (September 3, 1894 – December 20, 1947) was a Filipino politician who served as speaker of the National Assembly of the Japanese-sponsored puppet state in the Philippines from 1943 to 1944. He was the Director-General of KALIBAPI, a political party established during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines.

A member of the Aquino family, one of his grandchildren (through Benigno "Ninoy" Jr.), Benigno S. Aquino III was the 15th President of the Philippines, serving from 2010 to 2016.

Early life

Aquino was born in Murcia (now part of Concepcion, Tarlac) in the town of Tarlac to Servillano "Mianong" Aquino, a general in the Philippine Revolution who later served as a member of the Malolos Congress, and Guadalupe Quiambao. He had two siblings: Gonzalo Aquino (1893–??) and Amando Aquino (1896–??), and a half-brother, Herminio Aquino (1949–2021). He studied at the Colegio de San Juan de Letran in Manila and later at the University of Santo Tomas, where he earned his law degree in 1913, and was admitted to the bar the following year.

Political career

1921}}

Aquino was first elected to the Philippine Legislature as a member of the Philippine House of Representatives in 1919 representing the 2nd district of Tarlac. He was reelected to the same position in 1922 and 1925 before winning a Philippine Senate seat in 1928 representing the 3rd Senatorial District comprising the provinces of Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Pampanga and his home-province of Tarlac. He became part of the Philippine Independence Mission in 1931, which negotiated the terms of obtaining Philippine independence from the United States. During the elections for the Commonwealth of the Philippines government in 1935 he ran again in his district in Tarlac and won, this time as a member of the National Assembly. In 1937, he was appointed by Commonwealth President Manuel L. Quezon as secretary of agriculture and commerce.

Speaker of the National Assembly

Aquino (left) with Jose P. Laurel (right) and Jorge B. Vargas (center)

Being among the more prominent Commonwealth officials remaining in the country after the Commonwealth government went into exile in 1941, Aquino was among those recruited by the Japanese to form a government. He became the director-general of KALIBAPI and one of the two assistant chairmen of the Preparatory Commission for Philippine Independence. When the Second Philippine Republic was inaugurated, he was elected Speaker of the National Assembly.

Arrest and collaboration charges

Aquino (center) with [[Jose P. Laurel]] (2nd from left) and [[Jose Laurel III]] (2nd from right) in 1945.

In December 1944, as the combined Filipino and American forces continued their advance to liberate the Philippines from Japanese forces, the government of the Second Philippine Republic, which included Aquino, was moved to Baguio. Subsequently, they travelled to Tuguegarao, where they were flown to Japan via Formosa (now Taiwan) and Shanghai, China. On September 15, 1945, while in Nara, Aquino, alongside former President Jose P. Laurel and his son Jose III, was arrested and placed into custody by Americans led by Colonel Turner following the surrender of Japan. They were imprisoned at Yokohama prison and two months later at Sugamo Prison. On July 23, 1946, they were flown back to the Philippines for trial on treason charges by the People's Court. A few weeks later, he was released on bail.

Personal life

First marriage

In May 1916, he married Maria Urquico, the daughter of katipunero Antonio Urquico and Justa Valeriano. He had two sons and two daughters with Maria: Antonio Aquino "Tony" (1917–1993), Servillano Aquino II "Billy" (1919–1973), Milagros Aquino "Mila" (1924–2001), and Erlinda Aquino "Linda" (1926–2022).

Second marriage

After Maria died in March 1928, he married Aurora Lampa Aquino (maiden name, granddaughter of Melencio Aquino and Evarista de los Santos and daughter of Agapito de los Santos Aquino and Gerarda Miranda Lampa) on December 6, 1930, with whom he had seven children—Maria Aurora (Maur), Benigno Simeon Jr. (Ninoy), Maria Gerarda (Ditas), Maria Guadalupe (Lupita), Agapito (Butz), Paul, and Maria Teresa (Tessie).

Death

On December 20, 1947, Aquino died of a heart attack at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum in Manila while watching a boxing match.

Ancestry

References

References

  1. (1982). "Jose P. Laurel A Register of His Papers in the Jose P. Laurel Memorial Library-Museum". Jose P. Laurel Memorial Library.
  2. Castro, Alex D. r. (February 25, 2008). "VIEWS FROM THE PAMPANG: 73. THE OTHER BENIGNO".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Benigno Aquino Sr. — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report