History, asked by arulchristy4604, 6 months ago

How significant is history in the political and economic development of the philippines and of the filipinos?

Answers

Answered by AkashKumar372
1

The Political and Economic History

of the Philippine Islands

The Philippine Islands were part of the cultural area of the Malays, but history has created a quite different culture for the Malays in the Philippine Islands than it did for the rest of the Malays. It is uncertain when the Malays migrated into the Philippines but it is certain that they were not the first. There are tribes of small, black people called Negritos who still survive in the Philippines and who were there before the Malays.

In the 1300's and 1400's Moslem traders were converting the Malays of the archipelagoes of what are now Indonesia and the Philippines to Islam. The first Spanish contact with the Philippines was with Magellan's voyage in 1521. Several unsuccessful expeditions from New Spain (Mexico) were sent but a Spanish settlement was not established in the Philippines until 1565. By that time Islamization had reached the Manila area. For the Spanish these converts were just Moros (Moors) like they had dealt with back in the Iberian Peninsula. However King Philip of Spain had insisted that the conquest of the Philippiness be carried out with as little bloodshed as possible. (The Islands were named for King Philip, but the [f] phoneme does not occur in the local language. Thus they were given a name, Filipinos, which it was difficult for them to pronounce.)

The Spanish conquistadores soon defeated the local Moslem rulers and by 1571 ruled Manila. The conquerors established their capital at Manila. The Spanish had hopes of capturing some of the spice trade but in this they were disappointed. However the location of the Philippines made it ideal for engaging in some international trade with the Chinese Empire and the Japanese Empire. The Japanese Empire soon closed off contact with the outside world so that part of the plan failed.

The trade with China was channeled through Manila and from there went to Acapulco in New Spain (Mexico). Silver from the mines in New Spain was used to pay for the purchases in China. The colonization of the Philippines involved costs greater than the revenues it brought in and for many decades the Philippine venture depended upon a subsidy from New Spain.

The Spanish administrators in the Philippines developed a system of ruling through village headmen. This role of letting the village headmen act as spokesmen for the Spanish authorities greatly increased the prestige and power of the village headmen. When the question of title to the land came up the village headmen designated themselves as the title-holders for the village lands. This maldistribution of land continues to this day. The village headmen and their descendants became a social class known as principales. The principales had special privileges from the Spanish such as exemption from taxes.

The Spanish Empire depended very heavily on the clergy of the religious orders of the Catholic Church to spread Spanish culture and influence. The Dominicans, Franciscans and Augustinians had the responsibility for the conversion of the natives to Christianity and the Jesuits had responsiblity for education.

Answered by ri4
3

Answer:

The diversity and richness of Philippine literature evolved side by side with the country's history. This can best be appreciated in the context of the country's pre-colonial cultural traditions and the socio-political histories of its colonial and contemporary traditions. The average Filipino's unfamiliarity with his indigenous literature was largely due to what has been impressed upon him: that his country was "discovered" and, hence, Philippine "history" started only in 1521.  So successful were the efforts of colonialists to blot out the memory of the country's largely oral past that present-day Filipino writers, artists and journalists are trying to correct this inequity by recognizing the country's wealth of ethnic traditions and disseminating them in schools and in the mass media.  The rousings of nationalistic pride in the 1960s and 1970s also helped bring about this change of attitude among a new breed of Filipinos concerned about the "Filipino identity."

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