History, Lecture 3: by Restituto R. Ramos, M.A
History, Lecture 3: by Restituto R. Ramos, M.A
History, Lecture 3: by Restituto R. Ramos, M.A
By
Restituto R. Ramos, M.A.
Spanish Colonization and Christianization of
the Philippines
• Beginnings of the Spanish Nation
• Since it is a historical fact that Spanish rule was
mainly responsible for the evolution of the
Philippines as a nation,
• a study of Spanish history from how the nation of
Spain began all the way to the Age of Explorations
and Discoveries is in order, for events and policies
from Spain had far reaching repercussions in its
colonies like the Philippines during Spanish times.
• Spain and the Spanish Colonial Period in
Philippine History is often subject to a very
negative image for decades,
• mainly due to the so-called “La Leyenda
Negra” (Black Legend) which was introduced
during the American Period along with the
English language, which effectively cut the
Filipinos off from better understanding the
Spanish Period,
• due to the present lack of knowledge of the
Spanish language,
• and the fact is that most of the historical
documents of that period were written in Spanish,
• and the lack of facility in this language prevents
the Filipinos of today from appreciating the
Hispanic roots of their present culture,
• which is actually a result of the interaction of the
indigenous and Spanish cultures, as well as others.
• Spain is a nation in Western Europe at the Western
side of the Mediterranean Sea. It land area is 505,
370 square kilometers (315,856. 25 square miles)
making it the second largest country in land area in
the region after France.
• It is located in the Iberian Peninsula, which it shares
with Portugal and the tiny mountain-state of
Andorra. To the north is France, to which the
Pyrenees Mountains serves as are a natural barrier,
and where the city-state of Andorra is located.
Flag of Spain
Political Map of Spain and Portugal
• To its west is Portugal and the Atlantic Ocean.
To the northwest is the Bay of Biscay, to the east is
the Mediterranean Sea and the Balearic Islands,
• and at the Peninsula’s southern tip is the fortified
British enclave of Gibraltar but claimed by Spain
as part of its territory.
• Across the Strait of Gibraltar are the Spanish
enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla in North Africa, at
the fringes of Morocco
Mediterranean Sea (Political Map)
• Spain is also divided into several regions. The
heartland of the country is Castile, divided
into Castilla- La Mancha and Castilla y Leon,
where Spain’s capital and largest city of
Madrid is located, as well as Burgos, Palencia,
Avila, Salamanca, Valladolid and Toledo
(Spain’s original capital from Visigothic times
and Seat of its Catholic Primate).
Palacio Real (Royal Palace), Madrid, Spain
• To the south is the region of Andalucia,
known for its infernal heat during summer,
famous fiestas, verbenas, spectacular corridas
(bullfights) and flamenco.
• Here, Moorish rule lasted the longest, whose
influence is obvious in its people and culture.
A Typical House at Priego de Cordoba
Andalucia, Spain
Courtyard of a Traditional House in
Andalucia, Spain
Terraced White Houses at Priego de Cordoba,
Andalucia, Spain
Flamenco Dancers in Spain
Bullfighting in Spain
Bullfighting in Spain
• Its cities are Cordoba, Sevilla and Granada.
Sevilla from where the exploration and
colonization of Latin America and the
Philippines was launched and directed.
Cordoba is famous for its Cathedral, which was
originally a Muslim mosque, and Granada has
the famous Alhambra.
Cordoba Cathedral (originally a Muslim
Mosque)
Interior of Cordoba Cathedral
Inner Courtyard of the Alhambra in Granada,
Spain
• To the northeast is Cataluña (Catalonia), where the nation’s
second largest city of Barcelona is located and where the people
speak Catalan as their regional language and its inhabitants
sense of regional identity is often so strong that some want it to
separate from Spain and form an independent state.
• Due west of Cataluña Aragon and Navarra are the Basque
regions of Alava, Guipuzcoa and Vizcaya, home of the Basque
people who speak a very different language unrelated to any
other tongue, where the game of Jai Alai originated, and where
separatist sentiment is also quite strong among many if its
inhabitants that some want to separate the regions from Spain
and become independent.
Jai Alai players in Spain
Church of Sagrada Familia, Barcelona
Castillo Montjuich, Barcelona
• To the northwest is Galicia, where the famous
pilgrimage site of Santiago de Compostela with
its Shrine to Santiago de Matamoros (St. James
the Moorslayer) is located, with an often rainy
weather akin to that of Ireland.
• Besides the Spanish language, the people
there also speak their local idiom, Galician, or
Gallego, with its marked similarity to
Portuguese.
• Because of its location at the western end of the
Mediterranean Sea, Spain was considered to be at
the edge of civilization during ancient times with its
considerable distance from the centers of civilization
in the Eastern Mediterranean, such as Egypt,
Phoenicia (now Lebanon), and Greece.
• Even then, Spain received visits from these peoples,
especially the Greeks, who founded a settlement in
what is now the city of Barcelona and they gave the
name “Iberia” to the Peninsula.
• At present, “Iberia” is also the name of Spain’s
national airline and flag carrier.
Logo of Iberia Airlines of Spain
• As seen in the cave paintings of Altamira, Spain was
already settled by humans since prehistoric times. Its
native inhabitants, the Iberians (whom some scholars
claim that the modern Basque people, who speak a very
different language of unknown origin, are their modern
descendants), were later joined by Celtic settlers, forming
a new ethnic group, known as Celtiberians.
• Celtic influence is strong in Galicia, where bagpipes
reminiscent of those played in Scotland and the French
region of Brittany are still played and their traditional
costumes resemble those found in Ireland and Brittany.
Cave Paintings at Altamira, Spain
Traditional Bagpipers of Galicia, Spain
Ancient Greek Ruins in Ampurias, Gerona,
Cataluña, Spain
• By the third century B.C., Iberia became a
battleground between the two rival powers in the
Mediterranean, namely Rome and Carthage, for
which they fought the three Punic Wars with each
other, with Rome nearly losing the Second Punic War
for the Carthaginians won a string of victories under
the able leadership of Hannibal.
• Many of these battles were fought in Iberia, with
Hannibal leading his army, complete with elephants
and horses across Iberia and all the way into Italy.
• The Third Punic War resulted in the capture of
Carthage and with Rome becoming the undisputed
power in the Peninsula, although the Romans only
managed to put the entire Iberian Peninsula under
their complete control by 18 B.C.
• Even then, they never completely conquered the
Basques, some who until now, are still struggling
for independence for their people from the
Spanish state, especially by means of terrorism.
• Under the Romans, Iberia became known as
“Hispania” (where the modern name, “España,”
or Spain is derived) and it was under the nearly
eight centuries of Roman rule that Spain’s
linguistic and cultural identity was formed.
• Spain became one of the most heavily Romanized
provinces in the entire Roman Empire, along with
Lusitania (now roughly modern Portugal),
Ancient Roman Ruins at Merida,
Extremadura
Ancient Roman Aqueduct at Segovia
• with their own Latin language effectively propagated, so that it
became the basis for modern Spanish or Castilian, as well as regional
languages such as Catalan and Galician, and of Portuguese in
neighboring Portugal.
• Castilian is chiefly spoken as the first language of the inhabitants of
both Castilla-La Mancha and Castilla y Leon, Asturias, Aragon,
Extremadura, and of Andalucia, besides being mandated as the
official language of the Spanish State and is used throughout the
country either as a first or second language outside the Castilian
regions, although regional languages are guaranteed by the
Constitution as auxiliary official languages in their own regions, such
as Catalan in Catalonia, Galician in Galicia, and Basque (Euskadi) in
the Basque regions.
• Below are the similarities of some Spanish
words with the other Romance, or Latin-based
languages with their English translations.
English Latin Italian Spanish French Portuguese
San Pedro, San Pablo, San Juan and first landed on Samar, established
1564 Miguel López de Legazpi
San Lucas colonies as part of Spanish Empire
First expedition under Magellan