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==Early life==
==Early life==
[[File:Historical Marker at the Birthplace of Gregorio Aglipay.jpg|thumb|150px|left|[[Historical markers of the Philippines|Historical marker]] at [[Batac, Ilocos Norte]], the birthplace of Aglipay]]
[[File:Historical Marker at the Birthplace of Gregorio Aglipay.jpg|thumb|175px|left|[[Historical markers of the Philippines|Historical marker]] at [[Batac, Ilocos Norte]], the birthplace of Aglipay]]
Born in [[Batac]], [[Ilocos Norte]] on May 5 and baptized on May 9, 1860 in the Roman Catholic Church, Aglipay personally preferred May 8 as the celebration for his date of birth.<ref name="birth"/> He was the third child of Pedro Aglipay Cruz and Victoriana Labayán y Hilario and became an [[orphan]] at a young age who grew up in the care of relatives at the [[tobacco]] fields in the last volatile decades of the [[History of the Philippines (1521–1898)|Spanish occupation in the Philippines]]. He bore deep grievances against the [[Colonialism|colonial]] [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]] [[Real Audiencia of Manila|government]] of the islands, stemming from abuses within the [[Agriculture|agricultural]] system. [[Arrested]] at age fourteen for not meeting his [[tobacco]] quota as a tobacco-picking worker, he later moved to the country's [[Capital city|capital]] of [[Manila]] in 1876 to study [[law]] under the private tutelage of lawyer Julian Carpio with the financial help of his uncle Francisco del Amor Romas, who was a [[wikt:menial|menial]] employee of the [[Dominican Sisters of St. Catherine of Siena|Dominican Sisters]] [[Santa Catalina College|School of Santa Catalina]].<ref>[[Princeton University|University, Princeton]]. ''"[[The Catholic Historical Review]], Volume 4"''. [[American Catholic Historical Association]], 1919, p. 320.</ref>
Born in [[Batac]], [[Ilocos Norte]] on May 5 and baptized on May 9, 1860 in the Roman Catholic Church, Aglipay personally preferred May 8 as the celebration for his date of birth.<ref name="birth"/> He was the third child of Pedro Aglipay Cruz and Victoriana Labayán y Hilario and became an [[orphan]] at a young age who grew up in the care of relatives at the [[tobacco]] fields in the last volatile decades of the [[History of the Philippines (1521–1898)|Spanish occupation in the Philippines]]. He bore deep grievances against the [[Colonialism|colonial]] [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]] [[Real Audiencia of Manila|government]] of the islands, stemming from abuses within the [[Agriculture|agricultural]] system. [[Arrested]] at age fourteen for not meeting his [[tobacco]] quota as a tobacco-picking worker, he later moved to the country's [[Capital city|capital]] of [[Manila]] in 1876 to study [[law]] under the private tutelage of lawyer Julian Carpio with the financial help of his uncle Francisco del Amor Romas, who was a [[wikt:menial|menial]] employee of the [[Dominican Sisters of St. Catherine of Siena|Dominican Sisters]] [[Santa Catalina College|School of Santa Catalina]].<ref>[[Princeton University|University, Princeton]]. ''"[[The Catholic Historical Review]], Volume 4"''. [[American Catholic Historical Association]], 1919, p. 320.</ref>


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In 1896, a [[secret society]], [[Katipunan]], led by the Supremo, [[Andrés Bonifacio]], was discovered by Spanish authorities. With Roman Catholicism as the [[state religion]], Manila Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda tasked Aglipay to confront the revolutionary leaders, offering them a level of [[autonomy]] in the future for the Philippines if they would end [[Philippine Revolution|the rebellion]]. General [[Emilio Aguinaldo]], in turn, sent Colonel Luciano San Miguel to Aglipay with the intention of getting him to join the rebellion. Aguinaldo convinced Aglipay, who appointed him as [[military chaplain]] (''capellán castrense'') of the revolutionary government sometime in May or June 1898, the first ever to be appointed as such in the Philippine Revolution.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Church-State Relations in the 1899 Malolos Constitution: Filipinization and Visions of National Community |url=https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1003&context=history-faculty-pubs |last=Aguilar |first=Filomeno Jr. |publisher=archīum.ATENEO |website=[[Ateneo de Manila University]] |access-date=February 26, 2023}}</ref>
In 1896, a [[secret society]], [[Katipunan]], led by the Supremo, [[Andrés Bonifacio]], was discovered by Spanish authorities. With Roman Catholicism as the [[state religion]], Manila Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda tasked Aglipay to confront the revolutionary leaders, offering them a level of [[autonomy]] in the future for the Philippines if they would end [[Philippine Revolution|the rebellion]]. General [[Emilio Aguinaldo]], in turn, sent Colonel Luciano San Miguel to Aglipay with the intention of getting him to join the rebellion. Aguinaldo convinced Aglipay, who appointed him as [[military chaplain]] (''capellán castrense'') of the revolutionary government sometime in May or June 1898, the first ever to be appointed as such in the Philippine Revolution.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Church-State Relations in the 1899 Malolos Constitution: Filipinization and Visions of National Community |url=https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1003&context=history-faculty-pubs |last=Aguilar |first=Filomeno Jr. |publisher=archīum.ATENEO |website=[[Ateneo de Manila University]] |access-date=February 26, 2023}}</ref>


[[File:General Aguinaldo (seated, center) and ten of the delegates to the first Assembly of Representatives that passed the Con - NARA - 530993.tif|thumb|upright|150px|left|Aglipay (third from right, back row) together with some of the other delegates to the first Assembly of Representatives of the [[Malolos Congress]], taken in 1929 at the [[Barasoain Church]], 30 years after the [[Malolos Constitution]] was ratified.]]
[[File:General Aguinaldo (seated, center) and ten of the delegates to the first Assembly of Representatives that passed the Con - NARA - 530993.tif|thumb|upright|175px|left|Aglipay (third from right, back row) together with some of the other delegates to the first Assembly of Representatives of the [[Malolos Congress]], taken in 1929 at the [[Barasoain Church]], 30 years after the [[Malolos Constitution]] was ratified.]]
Aglipay also later became a member of the [[Malolos Congress]], the lone member coming from the religious sector, although he also represented his home province of Ilocos Norte, as well.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Church–State Relations in the 1899 Malolos Constitution: Filipinization and Visions of National Community |url=https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/seas/4/2/4_KJ00009896459/_pdf |last=Aguilar |first=Filomeno Jr. |date=February 18, 2015 |publisher=[[Kyoto University]] |website=[[J-STAGE]] |access-date=November 7, 2022}}</ref> On October 20, 1898, Aguinaldo elevated Aglipay to the post of [[Military chaplain|Military]] [[Vicar General]] (''Vicario General Castrense'') of the revolutionaries, a position that made him head of all military chaplains in the revolution. In the course of Aglipay's journey [[Ilocos Region|to the north]], the [[Philippine–American War]] started at the conclusion of the [[Spanish–American War]]. Aglipay interpreted his appointment as Vicar General as making him Ecclesiastical Superior to all Filipino priests, who as such should all be appointed military chaplains for the duration of the war.<ref name=ifi-om>[https://sites.google.com/a/ifi.ph/www/a-biographical-sketch-of-the-first-obispo-maximo "The First Obispo Maximo, Monsignor Gregorio L. Aglipay", Iglesia Filipina Independiente] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150831205706/http://www.ifi.ph/a-biographical-sketch-of-the-first-obispo-maximo |date=August 31, 2015 }}</ref>
Aglipay also later became a member of the [[Malolos Congress]], the lone member coming from the religious sector, although he also represented his home province of Ilocos Norte, as well.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Church–State Relations in the 1899 Malolos Constitution: Filipinization and Visions of National Community |url=https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/seas/4/2/4_KJ00009896459/_pdf |last=Aguilar |first=Filomeno Jr. |date=February 18, 2015 |publisher=[[Kyoto University]] |website=[[J-STAGE]] |access-date=November 7, 2022}}</ref> On October 20, 1898, Aguinaldo elevated Aglipay to the post of [[Military chaplain|Military]] [[Vicar General]] (''Vicario General Castrense'') of the revolutionaries, a position that made him head of all military chaplains in the revolution. In the course of Aglipay's journey [[Ilocos Region|to the north]], the [[Philippine–American War]] started at the conclusion of the [[Spanish–American War]]. Aglipay interpreted his appointment as Vicar General as making him Ecclesiastical Superior to all Filipino priests, who as such should all be appointed military chaplains for the duration of the war.<ref name=ifi-om>[https://sites.google.com/a/ifi.ph/www/a-biographical-sketch-of-the-first-obispo-maximo "The First Obispo Maximo, Monsignor Gregorio L. Aglipay", Iglesia Filipina Independiente] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150831205706/http://www.ifi.ph/a-biographical-sketch-of-the-first-obispo-maximo |date=August 31, 2015 }}</ref>



Revision as of 15:22, 18 January 2024


Gregorio Aglipay,
Obispo Máximo I

1st Supreme Bishop of the Philippine Independent Church
Gregorio Aglipay, circa before 1920s.
Church
InstalledSeptember 6, 1902
Term endedSeptember 1, 1940
PredecessorPosition created
SuccessorSantiago Antonio Fonacier y Suguitan
Orders
Ordination
Consecration
Rank
Personal details
Born
Gregorio Aglipay Cruz y Labayán

(1860-05-05)May 5, 1860[1]
DiedSeptember 1, 1940(1940-09-01) (aged 80)
Manila, Philippine Commonwealth
BuriedAglipay National Shrine, Batac, Ilocos Norte, Philippines
NationalityFilipino
Denomination
Spouse
Pilar Jamias y Ver
(m. 1939)
Children1
OccupationReligious leader, guerrilla leader, social and political activist, politician
ProfessionCatholic priest, Monsignor, Bishop of Aglipayan Church
Alma materColegio de San Juan de Letran (AB)
University of Santo Tomas (dropped out)
Immaculate Conception School of Theology (Vigan Seminary)[2]
Motto"Serve the people!"[3]
Sainthood
Feast daySeptember 5
Venerated in
Title as SaintBishop, Witness, Servant of God, and Visionary
ShrinesAglipay National Shrine, Batac, Ilocos Norte
Gregorio Aglipay Shrine, Pinili, Ilocos Norte
Known forThe first head (Supreme Bishop) of the Philippine Independent Church (Iglesia Filipina Independiente)
Styles of
Gregorio Aglipay
Reference styleHis Eminence
Spoken styleYour Eminence
Religious styleObispo Máximo I
Monsignor
Bishop
Posthumous styleThe Most Reverend
Gregorio Aglipay
Member of the Malolos Congress from Ilocos Norte
In office
September 15, 1898 – November 13, 1899
Serving with Pedro Paterno, Primitivo Donato, Martín García, José Luna, and Pio Romero
Personal details
Political partyRepublican (1905–1935)
Other political
affiliations
Independent (until 1905)
Military service
Allegiance Philippines
Branch/service Philippine Republican Army
Rank Lieutenant General
Battles/warsPhilippine–American War

Gregorio Aglipay Cruz y Labayán (Latin: Gregorius Aglipay; Filipino: Gregorio Labayan Aglipay Cruz; May 5, 1860 – September 1, 1940) was a Filipino former Roman Catholic priest and revolutionary who became the first head of the Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI), an independent Christian Church in the Philippines in the form of a nationalist church.

Known for inciting patriotic rebellion among the Filipino clergy during the Philippine Revolution and Philippine–American War, he was also a political activist who became acquainted with Isabelo de los Reyes who would then start an independent Christian Filipino Church colloquially named after Aglipay in 1902 as a revolt against the Roman Catholic Church, which was the state religion of the Philippines at the time, due to the mistreatment of the Spanish friars towards the Filipinos. Contrary to popular belief, Aglipay did not join the IFI until one month from its proclamation by de los Reyes and the Unión Obrera Democrática.

Aglipay was previously excommunicated by Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda y Villa of Manila in May 1899, upon the expressed permission of Pope Leo XIII, due to his involvement in revolutionary activities, despite his prior intercession and defense of some of the Spanish Roman Catholic clergy from liberal-nationalist Filipino revolutionaries. The Roman Catholic Church made attempts to bring Aglipay back to their fold, but failed. Aglipay later joined Freemasonry in May 1918, a society excommunicated by the Roman Catholic Church. Aglipay later married Pilar Jamias y Ver from Sarrat, Ilocos Norte in 1939 and then died one year later. Followers of Aglipay through the Church are sometimes colloquially referred to by their membership as Aglipayans.

Early life

Historical marker at Batac, Ilocos Norte, the birthplace of Aglipay

Born in Batac, Ilocos Norte on May 5 and baptized on May 9, 1860 in the Roman Catholic Church, Aglipay personally preferred May 8 as the celebration for his date of birth.[1] He was the third child of Pedro Aglipay Cruz and Victoriana Labayán y Hilario and became an orphan at a young age who grew up in the care of relatives at the tobacco fields in the last volatile decades of the Spanish occupation in the Philippines. He bore deep grievances against the colonial Spanish government of the islands, stemming from abuses within the agricultural system. Arrested at age fourteen for not meeting his tobacco quota as a tobacco-picking worker, he later moved to the country's capital of Manila in 1876 to study law under the private tutelage of lawyer Julian Carpio with the financial help of his uncle Francisco del Amor Romas, who was a menial employee of the Dominican Sisters School of Santa Catalina.[4]

After two years of study under Carpio, Aglipay continued his studies at the Colegio de San Juan de Letran in 1878 for his third year, as a working student, and later at the University of Santo Tomas in 1882 wherein he was an academic topnotcher. During his time in Santo Tomas, Aglipay met José Rizal, a senior medical student. After obtaining his pre-law Bachelor of Arts degree in Letran, he discontinued his law studies at Santo Tomas and then entered the Roman Catholic seminary in Vigan, Ilocos Sur in 1883 at age 23, as influenced by Rizal.[5][6][7] He was ordained to the priesthood six years later on December 21, 1889 at the old Dominican Church in Intramuros, Manila and celebrated his first mass as an ordained Roman Catholic priest in January 1890. He then began a career as an assistant priest to Spanish friars in various parishes around the main northern island of Luzon, notably in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia.[8] He later dropped Cruz in his surname and while serving in Victoria, Tarlac, Aglipay discreetly gave aid to the revolutionaries and employed thirty carpenters who in reality were revolutionists in touch with the Katipunan group. Aglipay then organized the said revolutionists and called their group Liwanag ("Light"), a local auxiliary of the Katipunan based in Victoria, Tarlac.

Philippine Revolution

In 1896, a secret society, Katipunan, led by the Supremo, Andrés Bonifacio, was discovered by Spanish authorities. With Roman Catholicism as the state religion, Manila Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda tasked Aglipay to confront the revolutionary leaders, offering them a level of autonomy in the future for the Philippines if they would end the rebellion. General Emilio Aguinaldo, in turn, sent Colonel Luciano San Miguel to Aglipay with the intention of getting him to join the rebellion. Aguinaldo convinced Aglipay, who appointed him as military chaplain (capellán castrense) of the revolutionary government sometime in May or June 1898, the first ever to be appointed as such in the Philippine Revolution.[9]

Aglipay (third from right, back row) together with some of the other delegates to the first Assembly of Representatives of the Malolos Congress, taken in 1929 at the Barasoain Church, 30 years after the Malolos Constitution was ratified.

Aglipay also later became a member of the Malolos Congress, the lone member coming from the religious sector, although he also represented his home province of Ilocos Norte, as well.[10] On October 20, 1898, Aguinaldo elevated Aglipay to the post of Military Vicar General (Vicario General Castrense) of the revolutionaries, a position that made him head of all military chaplains in the revolution. In the course of Aglipay's journey to the north, the Philippine–American War started at the conclusion of the Spanish–American War. Aglipay interpreted his appointment as Vicar General as making him Ecclesiastical Superior to all Filipino priests, who as such should all be appointed military chaplains for the duration of the war.[5]

Philippine–American War

Then-Manila Archibishop Bernardino Nozaleda y Villa, who served from 1889 to 1902, excommunicated Aglipay upon the expressed permission of the pope due to his involvement in revolutionary activities at the height of the Philippine–American War.

When Aglipay returned to Manila and discovered that the Americans had attacked, he joined the revolution. The fighting that broke out between the U.S. and Filipino forces on February 4, 1899, prompted Aglipay to withdraw to Ilocos Norte to organize an armed resistance and was given the rank of lieutenant-general.[11] On April 29, 1899, Aglipay was excommunicated by Manila Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda for "usurpation of ecclesiastical jurisdiction," and the sentence of excommunication was exposed from May 4 to June 5 in the archiepiscopal tribunal of Manila.[12][13]

Aglipay was one of the last generals to surrender to the Americans. Realizing the futility of the cause for which they had been fighting, on April 28, 1901, a month after the capture of Aguinaldo, he surrendered to Captain Edward Mann Lewis of the 20th U.S. Regular Infantry in Laoag, to prevent further casualties from his men as he saw less chances of winning from the much dominant American troops. After his surrender, he later moved back to the already-American-occupied Manila and worked on reconciling with the Roman Catholic Church. The Americans officially ended the war on July 2, 1902, and granted full amnesty to all persons in the Philippines who had participated in the conflict.[14]

After the war

Aglipay circa 1905.
Aglipay (center, seated), together with two IFI priests

Following the end of the war in 1902, writer-activist Isabelo de los Reyes was working towards the formation of a nationalist church, that is independent of Rome. Spanish friars were still in control of the parishes all throughout the country at the time of the American occupation. On August 3, de los Reyes proclaimed the establishment of the church and suggested that Aglipay be its first head bishop. Aglipay, a devout Catholic at the time even after he had been excommunicated, was reluctant as he was initially against a schism,[15] but eventually accepted de los Reyes' offer to head an independent church on September 6, 1902, and was appointed as the first Supreme Bishop or Obispo Máximo of the "Philippine Independent Church" (officially Iglesia Filipina Independiente, abbreviated as IFI and also referred as the "Aglipayan Church" after him).[5]

According to renowned historian Teodoro Agoncillo, Aglipay finally decided to join the new church after his talks with Francisco Foradada, a Spaniard Jesuit priest and author, backfired. Knowing that Aglipay was influential with the Filipino clergy, the Jesuits assigned Foradada in a desperate attempt to persuade Aglipay from returning to the Roman Catholic fold in order to further prevent the schism from succeeding. Aglipay was allegedly offered to be appointed bishop or archbishop with a large sum of money thrown in if he would return. Aglipay would have sign a document of confession to the Roman Catholic Church but on condition of assurance that by signing the document, the issues of the native Filipino Catholic priests would be solved, and that the Filipino clergy would be appointed to the posts formerly held by the Spanish regulars. Foradada responded by tactlessly asking "why would he care about Filipino priests since the world knows that they are vicious and hopelessly inefficient." It was believed that Aglipay felt insulted by Foradada's brash comments that he angrily lunged at him and held him by the nape demanding to withdraw his remarks as Foradada, terrified, fell on his knees. Subsequently, Aglipay reputedly walked out from the meeting and threw away the document.

Although he had already decided to join the new church after his first failed conference with the Jesuits, Aglipay was still disinclined to accept the supreme bishop post. He even met with American Protestant leaders and tried to persuade them to assist and join them in their new Filipinized church in order "to divide the ranks of the Catholics." Aglipay also suggested that Filipino priests would be appointed to higher ranks on the clergy. The American Protestants declined Aglipay's proposal as they found the new church "too Roman in its ritual" and "too rationalistic in its theology." They were also seemingly adamant on having Filipino church leaders at the time as they were likely "enjoying the feeling of superiority."

In a final attempt, the Jesuits tried to negotiate again with Aglipay years after the establishment of the new church through Spanish Father Joaquin Villalonga. Pope Pius X had approved to grant Aglipay pardon if the new church went back to the Roman Catholic fold, but Aglipay was already persistent to continue the Iglesia Filipina Independiente.[16]

Aglipay celebrated his first mass as the de facto Supreme Bishop on October 26, 1902. On January 18, 1903, Aglipay was consecrated to the position of Supreme Bishop by the Church's Bishops of Isabela, Cagayan, Pangasinan, Abra, Nueva Ecija, Cavite, and Manila. As Supreme Bishop, he allied himself with the nationalist and most radical political parties during his time, like the Sakdalistas, and later on, even with the Socialist and Communist parties.[12][16]

During the theological discussions he attended while visiting other churches on his travels abroad, Aglipay later rejected the belief in the Trinity and became theologically accepting of the main Unitarian belief, however, a significant number from his own Church refused to accept his amended theology. Aglipay's unitarian, rationalist, and progressive theological ideas were evident in his "novena", the "Pagsisiyam sa Birhen sa Balintawak", 1925[17] and its English translation, "Novenary of the Motherland", 1926.[11][18]

Aglipay was awarded Doctor of Divinity (honoris causa) by the Meadville Theological School in Chicago, Illinois in 1931.

Later life and legacy

Bust of Gregorio Aglipay at Rizal Park
Portrait of Aglipay at the Iglesia Filipina Independiente Parish of St. John the Baptist in Taguig City

Despite being a Christian leader, Aglipay, like other revolutionaries, later joined Freemasonry.[19] Aglipay ran for elections in 1935 as President of the Commonwealth under the Republican Party, the first nationwide at-large election ever held in the Philippines. He was the last presidential candidate to announce his candidacy, along with Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas' candidate Norberto Nabong as his running mate in a joint Republican-Communist Party ticket,[12] but both lost to Manuel L. Quezon and Sergio Osmeña of the Nacionalista Party, respectively. Aglipay was the first ever religious leader to ran for presidency in the history of the Philippines. He sent a congratulatory message to Quezon three days after the election when the results became apparent and quickly accepted defeat.

Also referred to as Apo Aglipay by his followers, he married then 64-year-old Pilar Jamias y Ver, a teacher from Sarrat, Ilocos Norte, in 1939 since his Church permits married clergy; but he died the following year on September 1, 1940, due to natural causes (cerebral hemorrhage), aged 80. Then-President Manuel L. Quezon, his cabinet, and most of the highest state officials came to pay their respects in a funeral service for Aglipay. Although he had for many years opposed celibacy among the priesthood, Aglipay himself was not married until the age of 79. Aglipay and Jamias begot a daughter before their marriage, named Liwliwa, born on February 24, 1913. She served as Philippine secretary of the Rationalist Society of London and secretary to Aglipay in translating English letters for his contacts abroad. She studied at the University of the Philippines. Liwliwa died on February 17, 1938, seven days before her 25th birthday or thirteen months before the marriage of Aglipay and Jamias. She was buried in the Pasay Municipal Cemetery.[5]

Aglipay held the position of Supreme Bishop until his death. His remains are interred at the Cathedral of Saint Mary, Aglipay National Shrine in Batac, Ilocos Norte.[20]

Aglipay was on trial calendars in the Episcopal Church's calendar of saints in the years 2009 and 2015 but the aforementioned calendars were never made official and his feast is not part of current proposals.

The City of Batac, Ilocos Norte annually celebrates the 1st day of September as a special non-working holiday to commemorate the death anniversary of Aglipay, known as the "Gregorio L. Aglipay Day", which was enacted on February 10, 1989, as per Republic Act No. 6701.[21]

References

  1. ^ a b Achutegui, Pedro S.; Bernad, Miguel A. (1957). "The True Birth Date of Gregorio Aglipay". Philippine Studies. 5 (4). Ateneo de Manila University: 370–387. JSTOR 42719339. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  2. ^ "FULL TEXT: Bishop Antonio's homily during Mass for Vigan Seminary's 200th anniversary". CBCP News. August 8, 2022. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
  3. ^ "Statements: LIVING OUT BISHOP GREGORIO AGLIPAY'S LEGACY, PROMOTING AND DEFENDING HUMAN DIGNITY". Google Sites. IFI. April 13, 2023.
  4. ^ University, Princeton. "The Catholic Historical Review, Volume 4". American Catholic Historical Association, 1919, p. 320.
  5. ^ a b c d "The First Obispo Maximo, Monsignor Gregorio L. Aglipay", Iglesia Filipina Independiente Archived August 31, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Rollo, Andrea (2023). "Reflections on José Rizal, Arnis, and the Nature of 'Historical Knowledge'". Humanities Diliman (July-December 2023). 20 (2). University of the Philippines Diliman and University of Alicante: 107–144. Retrieved December 27, 2023.
  7. ^ Foronda, Marcelino Jr. A. (1962). "Rizal and Aglipay". The Journal of History. 10 (1). Philippine E-Journals (PEJ. Retrieved December 27, 2023.
  8. ^ Achutegui, Pedro S.; Bernad, Miguel A. (1959). "Aglipay as Ecclesiastical Governor Of Nueva Segovia: His Circular Letters". Philippine Studies. 7 (2). Ateneo de Manila University: 135–161. JSTOR 42719436. Retrieved December 17, 2022.
  9. ^ Aguilar, Filomeno Jr. "Church-State Relations in the 1899 Malolos Constitution: Filipinization and Visions of National Community". Ateneo de Manila University. archīum.ATENEO. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  10. ^ Aguilar, Filomeno Jr. (February 18, 2015). "Church–State Relations in the 1899 Malolos Constitution: Filipinization and Visions of National Community". J-STAGE. Kyoto University. Retrieved November 7, 2022.
  11. ^ a b Aglipay y Labayán, Gregorio. "Novenary of the motherland : (the motherland is symbolized in the envisioned Mother of Balintawak)". The Western Michigan University Libraries United States Civil War Collection. The United States and its Territories, 1870 - 1925: The Age of Imperialism. Retrieved December 17, 2022.
  12. ^ a b c History of Iglesia Filipina Independiente
  13. ^ Robertson, James A. (1918). "The Aglipay Schism in the Philippine Islands". The Catholic Historical Review. 4 (3). Catholic University of America Press: 315–344. JSTOR 25011584. Retrieved December 17, 2022.
  14. ^ Cullum, Leo A. "Review of AGLIPAY AND HIS CHURCH, by Pedro S. de Achútegui and Miguel A. Bernad". Philippine Studies. Ateneo de Manila University. JSTOR 42719626. Retrieved January 25, 2023.
  15. ^ Umali, Justin (March 9, 2020). "How the First Filipino Church Was Born: The Iglesia Filipina Independiente". Esquire Philippines. Retrieved November 5, 2022.
  16. ^ a b Agoncillo, Teodoro (1990). History of the Filipino people (8th ed.). Quezon City [Philippines]: Garotech Pub. ISBN 9718711066. OCLC 29915943.
  17. ^ Gealogo, Francis A. (2010). "Time, Identity, and Nation in the "Aglipayan Novenario ng Balintawak" and "Calendariong Maanghang"". Philippine Studies. 58 (1/2): 147–168. JSTOR 42632051. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  18. ^ Aglipay y Labayán, Gregorio. "Novenary of the motherland : (the motherland is symbolized in the envisioned Mother of Balintawak)". The Western Michigan University Libraries United States Civil War Collection. The United States and its Territories, 1870 - 1925: The Age of Imperialism. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  19. ^ "Famous Filipino Mason – Bishop G. Aglipay". Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of the Philippines. Archived from the original on October 14, 2007. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
  20. ^ "News Summary, Philippine Magazine: February 15 – March 14, 1939". Official Gazette (Philippines). April 1, 1939. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  21. ^ "Republic Act No. 6701 (AN ACT DECLARING SEPTEMBER ONE OF EVERY YEAR, THE DEATH ANNIVERSARY OF GREGORIO AGLIPAY Y LABAYAN, AS GREGORIO L. AGLIPAY DAY AND A SPECIAL NON-WORKING HOLIDAY IN THE MUNICIPALITY OF BATAC, PROVINCE OF ILOCOS NORTE)". Official Gazette of the Philippines. February 10, 1989. Retrieved February 12, 2023.

Sources

  • Halili, Christine N. (2004) Philippine History, pp 192–93. ISBN 9712339343.