Chapter 2rizal
Chapter 2rizal
Chapter 2rizal
as Rizal’s context
Presented by Group 1
“Man is partly the product of his time. His life and his
messages are affected by his environment and the event that
take place in the world he lives in.”
• Jose V. Basco who became the first Governor-General to the Philippines under the
Bourbon reign arrived in the country in 1778 when the Galleon trade was failing
venture.
College:
• Boys and Girls separated
• Included history, Latin, geography, mathematics and philosophy.
• 17th century when colleges and universities were opened (for Spaniards and
mestizos (those with Spaniards blood)
• 19th century started accepting native Filipinos. Did not earnestly teach
science and mathematics.
Education in the 19th Century
• In 1863, a royal decree called for the establishment of a public
school system
• Church controlled the curriculum
• Previously exclusive for Spaniards and Spanish Mestizos. Limited
accommodation to natives, to wealthy Indio families
• As a result, a new social class emerged: Ilustrados. But despite their
wealth and education, were still deemed inferior. One of their aims
was to be in the same level with the proud Spanairds.
Education in the 19th Century
• With the opening of Suez Cana, local took advantage to study abroad typically
in Madrid and Barcelona.
• Their nationalism and the thirst for reform bloomed in the liberal atmosphere.
• The new enlightened class would later lead the Philippines
independence movement, using the Spanish language as their key
means of communication. Out of this talented group of students came
Propaganda Movement. The most prominent of Ilustrados was Jose
Rizal.
The Rise of Chinese Mestizo
• The rise of the mestizos were important element of the Philippines society
in the 19th century.
• The Chinese mestizo played an important part in the creation and evolution
of what is now called the Filipino nation.
• According to Fr. Jesus Merino, no matter how Malayan, it may be in its main
ethnic stock, no matter how Spanish and Christian, it may be in its
inspiration, civilization and religion, no matter how American it may be in
its politics, trade and aspiration has been historically and practically shaped,
not by the Chinese immigrant but by the Chinese mestizo.
The Rise of Chinese Mestizo
• The development of commercial agriculture in the archipelago
resulted in the presence of a new class. Alongside the
landholdings of the church and the rice estates of the pre-
Spanish nobility, there emerged haciendas of sugar, coffee
and hemp, typically owned by enterprising Chinese-Filipino
mestizos.
• Chinese Mestizo are those Filipinos with Chinese blood either
on the paternal or maternal side. “ Jose Rizal is a Chinese
Mestizo”
The Rise of Chinese Mestizo
This middle class included:
• The ilustrados who belonged to the landed gentry (upper or ruling
class) and who were highly respected in their respective towns,
though regarded as filibusteros or rebels by the friars.
• The relative prosperity of the period has enabled them to send their
sons of Spain and Europe for higher studies. Most of them later
became members of freemasonry and active in the propaganda
Movement.
• Some of them sensed the failure of reformism and radicalism and
looked up to Rizal as their leader.
The Rise of the Inquilinos (tenant)
• Inquilinos system in the Philippines is better understood as the right to
use land in exchange for rent. Consequently, many estate turned
progressively to the inquilino system of land tenure.
• Inquilinos paid a fixed rent and the amount was determined by the size
and quality of the land being worked on. But with expansion of land
owned by missionary congregations (friar estates), the proportion of
farmlands leased to inquilinos also increased allowing many of them to
sub-lease parcels of their land to sharecroppers of kasamas.
• As friar states enlarged, outlining the boundaries that separated these
estates from communal lands became a common cause of conflict.
Political Landscape
Liberalism
• A political philosophy based on belief in progress,
the essentials goodness of the human race, and
the autonomy of the individual and standing for
the protection of political and civil liberties.
Origins of 19th Century Liberalism
• The word was first used when the term was adopted
by the Spanish political party, the liberales in 1812.
• Liberalism usually encompasses the belief that the
government should act to alleviate poverty and other
social problems, but not though through radical
changes to the structure of society.
• General Carlos Maria De la Torre, a fierce liberal, brought liberalism in the
Philippines and was appointed to be Governor-General