Magdiwang (faction)
The Magdiwang was a chapter of the Katipunan, a Philippine revolutionary organization founded by Filipino rebels in Manila in 1892 with the aim to gain independence from Spain. The Magdiwang Council was acknowledged as "the supreme organ responsible for the successful campaigns against the enemy" within Cavite.[1]
Type | Political faction |
---|---|
Headquarters | Noveleta, Cavite |
President | Mariano Álvarez |
Key people | Mariano Trías Santiago Álvarez Pascual Álvarez Artemio Ricarte |
Parent organization | Katipunan |
The Magdiwang chapter was started by Mariano Álvarez, related by marriage to Andrés Bonifacio, the leader of the Katipunan. Both the Magdiwang and the Magdalo (led by Baldomero Aguinaldo, the cousin of Emilio Aguinaldo) were the two major Katipunan factions in Cavite, with the Magdiwang having control over a larger number of towns and municipalities.
When rivalry grew between the two factions, Bonifacio was invited to mediate, but he was quickly embroiled in discussions with the Magdalo, who wished to replace the Katipunan with an insurgent government.[2] The Magdiwang initially backed Bonifacio's stance that the Katipunan already served as their government, but at the Tejeros Convention, both factions were combined into one government body under Aguinaldo.
Magdiwang leaders
- Lorenzo Fenoy - Vice President for Batangas
- Pascual Álvarez - Minister of the Interior
- Ariston Villanueva - Minister of War
- Ananias Diokno - Vice Minister of War of Batangas
- Mariano Trías - Minister of Welfare and Justice
- Emiliano Riego de Dios - Minister of Economic Development
- Diego Mojica - Minister of Finance
- Santiago V. Álvarez - Captain General
- Artemio Ricarte - Assistant Captain General
- Miguel Malvar - Assistant Captain General for Batangas
- Mariano Riego de Dios - General, Cavite Division
- Paciano Rizal - General, Batangas Division[3]
Magdiwang municipalities
- Cavite City (capital)
- San Roque
- La Caridad
- Noveleta
- San Francisco de Malabon (now General Trias)
- Rosario (locally referred to as Salinas)
- Sta. Cruz de Malabon (now Tanza)
- Naik
- Maragondon
- Ternate
- Magallanes
- Bailen (now General Emilio Aguinaldo)
- Indang
- Alfonso
- Mendez
- Amadeo
- Nasugbu, Batangas
- Tuy, Batangas
- Looc, Batangas
References
- Alvarez 1992, p. 22.
- Alvarez 1992, p. 90.
- Abaya, Doroteo (1998). Miguel Malvar and the Philippine Revolution. p. 52.
- Alvarez, Santiago V. (1992). Recalling the revolution: memoirs of a Filipino general. University of Wisconsin, Center for Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN 978-1-881261-05-6.
Further reading
- M.c. Halili (2004). Philippine History. Rex Bookstore, Inc. p. 147–. ISBN 978-971-23-3934-9.