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Battlefield Diplomacy and Empire-building in the Indo-Pacific World during the Seven Years’ War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 December 2016

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Abstract

In 1762, at the height of the Seven Years’ War, Britain’s Royal Navy and East India Company mobilised a motley army of Europeans, South Asians, and Africans and invaded Manila, the capital of Spain’s Asian Empire. The Black Legend blinded the British to the complexities of the real balance of power in the Philippines. The Spanish colonial government quickly raised militias of Spaniards, Mexicans, Chinese mestizos, and indigenous Filipinos who ultimately defeated the British. The loyalties of the soldiers of many nations who converged in Manila could not be taken for granted. This article examines the ongoing bargaining that took place between imperial officials and soldiers, revealing the crucial role that negotiation played in eighteenth-century empire building beyond the Atlantic. War transformed fighting men of many nations into important historical actors who determined the outcome of the Seven Years’ War in the Indo-Pacific world.

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© 2016 Research Institute for History, Leiden University 

In late September 1762, at the height of the Seven Years’ War, a combined Royal Navy and East India Company fleet with an army of 1,700 men invaded Manila. The Spanish colony was completely unprepared for this attack, being unaware that Britain and Spain were at war until British battleships entered Manila Bay with guns blazing.Footnote 1 The walled centre of the city known as Intramuros fell to the invaders after two weeks of heavy shelling and fighting. The raising of the British flag over the “the metropolis and capital of the Philippine Islands” could have signalled the end of Spain’s Asian empire.Footnote 2 Yet Simón de Anda y Salazar, a senior Basque official in Manila’s colonial government, refused to surrender. As the British held captive Manila’s Archbishop Rojo, who was also the interim governor of the Philippines, Anda fled to the town of Bacolor, declared himself governor of the islands, and vowed to restore the ‘pearl of the orient’ to Spain.

For the next nineteen months, Anda used Bacolor as a base to raise a vast, loyalist army that brutally supressed two major indigenous rebellions sparked by Spain’s temporary loss of its capital, and waged guerrilla warfare against the British, effectively containing them in Intramuros and the nearby fort at Cavite. Catholic priests enthusiastically encouraged their parishioners to join Anda’s campaign to eject the Protestant heretics from the islands. There were frequent, bloody skirmishes between Spanish and British forces. The familiar, dense tropical forests provided cover for Anda’s troops to shoot arrows and bullets at enemy patrols and maintain dominance over the roadways and waterways that traversed Manila’s hinterland, and hence access to rice, wheat, and cattle. In the hot summer of 1763, major battles broke out at Bulucán and Malinta, but the foundry Anda built at Bacolor supplied his soldiers with sufficient artillery to push the British back to Manila. The war formally ended when news of the peace treaty that returned the Philippines to Spain reached the colony in April 1764. However, so far as those on the ground on in Manila were concerned, the Treaty of Paris was a formality that confirmed what was obvious to all: the British were defeated, and Spain’s Asian empire was far more resilient than the masterminds of the invasion had ever anticipated.

It is inaccurate to describe the armies that converged in the Philippines in 1762–64 as “British” and “Spanish”; these were composite bodies with porous boundaries that were frequently transgressed. The motley “British” army that attacked and occupied Manila was mobilised from Madras (present-day Chennai), which made it fundamentally different from the British armies that saw action in the Atlantic world at this time. No more than a third of these soldiers were Englishmen. The army incorporated approximately three hundred French and other European soldiers who had become prisoners of war at Pondicherry when the British captured the French colony in Southern India in 1761. It also included a contingent of Coffreys (Africans) who most likely travelled to Southern India via the slave trade that thrived between Portuguese Mozambique and Goa. More than 600 soldiers were South Asian sepoys. The British brought an additional 100 South Asian lascars to Manila to perform the heavy labour of war, including transporting supplies from ship to shore to battlefield, and burying the dead.Footnote 3 Anda’s “Spanish” army was similarly diverse, combining thousands of indios (indigenous Filipinos), chinos (Chinese), and mestizos, hundreds of Mexican convict-soldiers, as well as Spaniards born in Spain and the Philippines who were always in the minority. Troops defecting from the British forces also bolstered Anda’s ranks. In May 1763, senior East India Company officials in Manila estimated Anda had mobilised 12,000 people against the invaders.Footnote 4

In this article I argue that British and Spanish military leaders could not take for granted the loyalty of their respective multi-ethnic armies. Analysing published collections of British and Spanish primary sources, in addition to original British and Spanish manuscripts, I show that Simón de Anda and Dawsonne Drake, the East India Company servant who became the first British governor of Manila, were obliged to bargain with soldiers and forge alliances with local communities to sustain this war for sovereignty over the Philippines. This business of coalition building transformed ordinary soldiers into important historical actors who came to influence the outcome of the Seven Years’ War in Asia. The dynamics of battlefield diplomacy ultimately favoured Anda and ensured the survival of Spanish colonial rule in the Philippines.

Although Asia remains marginalised in most recent histories of the Seven Years’ War, several discrete studies of the British invasion and occupation of Manila have been published in the past two centuries.Footnote 5 These are essentially a series of popular, nationalist narratives rather than critical, scholarly studies. Since 1764, Anglo histories have promoted the fiction that the British faced little resistance in the Philippines, and that the islands were returned to Spain in error at the negotiations of the Treaty of Paris.Footnote 6 Spanish historiography celebrates Anda’s heroic campaign against the British while understating the agency of the thousands of men who elected to fight with him against the invaders.Footnote 7 A third wave of anticolonial scholarship explores the indigenous uprisings that erupted during the occupation, interpreting these as protonationalist movements while downplaying the fact that Spain’s indigenous allies helped thwart this challenge to Spanish rule.Footnote 8

This article presents a revisionist interpretation of the war. The British invasion and occupation of Manila should be understood as part of the larger process of accelerated European expansion into the Indo-Pacific world in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, or the Age of Revolutions. In this era Manila was central to the defence of Spain’s interests across the “Spanish lake,” including new colonies founded along the Californian coast.Footnote 9 The British Crown and the East India Company considered the conquest of Manila a key step in their shared, long-term plan to establish a permanent British colony in the Philippine Islands, and to further extend what historians have called the “Second” British Empire. This article thus offers new insight into the messy, contested process of empire building in Asia, highlighting the roles subalterns played in this process.Footnote 10

Figure 1 Map of the Philippine Islands.

Competing for the fidelity of fighting men

Many of the men the British deployed to Manila were skilled soldiers experienced in the art of war and equipped with specialised knowledge of artillery, especially in handling cannon.Footnote 11 They were highly valuable assets on the battlefield and Anda and Drake competed for their labour. The leaders of the British forces in Manila believed these soldiers’ loyalties could be bought: as Captain Thomas Backhouse remarked, “I never saw a soldier but what would rather have one dollar in hand than forty in them to any agent upon earth.”Footnote 12 Accordingly they offered troops various material incentives to fight with the British rather than against them. In January 1763, the Manila Council satisfied sepoys’ demands to receive their pay in advance, recognising that “the consequence that may attend the non-payment of the troops may be very fatal.” Two months later, the Council granted a general pay rise to “soldiers, sepoys and lascars,” and increased European soldiers’ daily alcohol ration. Council minutes noted it was “highly necessary to allow [the troops] all possible indulgencies, in order to prevent any murmurings or application to return to the [Coromandel] Coast.”Footnote 13

Simón de Anda worked hard to persuade enemy soldiers to defect to his army. In May 1763 he sent word to those stationed at “the little fort at Pasig” that he was preparing to attack with “five hundred good Spanish soldiers with the French Company consisting of 50 men, six thousand Pampangoes (sic), and thirty Malabares, and six pieces of Cannon.” He invited the troops to defect and “deliver up the garrison guns [and] ammunition” to the Spanish army for a considerable fifteen-dollar reward. In the same month, the Manila Council recorded that Anda was tempting defectors with the “considerable sum” of “no less than 100 Dollars per man besides paying for their arms.”Footnote 14

Anda consistently offered soldiers more silver than the British were willing or able to. This was possible because he succeeded in smuggling into his camp the huge silver trove from the galleon ship, the Filipino, that arrived in the Philippines from Mexico in mid-1763.Footnote 15 Significantly, Anda also offered freedom to defectors. He promised that fighting men would not be forcibly pressed into the Spanish army as was the custom of war. Rather, each man could choose to remain in the Philippines and join Spanish military forces where they would be handsomely compensated with double the wages they received from the Royal Navy or East India Company, or they could travel to Mexico “or any other place that you think proper.”Footnote 16

The combination of silver and liberty enticed many fighting men to abandon British battalions and join Anda’s cause. French soldiers fled to the Spanish army en masse as soon as they arrived in the Philippines. Rumours spread that an entire French garrison stole themselves away from the British camp in the dead of night disguised in women’s clothes.Footnote 17 Drake was forced to place his remaining French troops under lock and key on prison ships anchored in Manila Bay to halt the flow of these highly skilled soldiers into enemy ranks.Footnote 18 Drake assumed that religion and the encouragement of Catholic priests influenced the French soldiers’ defection: “as they are most of the Romish Religion, the Friars would by degrees have carried off the whole.”Footnote 19

The published records of the meetings between Drake and his Manila Council of advisors are full of references to sepoys running away to Anda’s camp and marching into battle against their former British commanders.Footnote 20 In fact large numbers of these South Asian soldiers remained active in Spain’s military in Manila long after the Seven Years’ War came to an end. In 1766 the Spanish Governor of the Philippines José Antonio Raón Gutiérrez reported “blacks, sipayes (sepoys), and malabares (Malabaris)” were numerous in the colony’s standing army.Footnote 21 In the late 1770s the Spanish colonial government formally established the Compañia de Malabares (Malabar Company) in which approximately one hundred South Asian soldiers were enlisted.Footnote 22

Several English soldiers and artillerymen who defected to the Spanish in Manila also remained employed in the Spanish colony’s army for many years after the war. Although only six Englishmen were counted among the 1,228 men who formed the King’s Infantry Regiment in Manila in 1767, these foreigners occupied quite senior positions. The Plymouth-born “Enrrique Wilson” and the Scott “Carlos Murray” both served as lieutenants in this regiment in 1769.Footnote 23 These ordinary soldiers shored up Spanish sovereignty in the Philippines by contributing to the military campaign to eject the British from Manila in 1762–64, and by supporting subsequent reforms that radically reorganised and dramatically expanded Spain’s military in the Philippines in defence against the expanding British empire in the Indo-Pacific world.Footnote 24

Silver was not the only factor soldiers considered when deciding fight or take flight. Fighting men were not completely free agents; military discipline imposed a very real constraint upon soldiers’ agency. In wartime traitors were punished with death. Stories circulated that Anda hanged anyone he captured carrying rupees, the currency in which the British paid troops and collaborators.Footnote 25 In August 1763 the British arrested Francisco de la Cruz, who they described as “a Malay,” for encouraging two sepoys to defect to Anda’s army. De la Cruz allegedly promised the men 100 dollars each if they accompanied him to the Spanish stronghold in Bacolor, and an additional allowance of 100 dollars per month if they would stay and join the loyalist forces. In light of the “frequent desertions, and the town and suburbs swarming with these seducers,” Drake and his advisors deemed it necessary to make an example of De la Cruz. They sentenced him to be marched across the city of Manila, “through the suburbs of Santa Cruz … causing his crime to be published at the corner of every street, until he reaches Quiapo, and that he there be hanged … to deter others from following his example.” Soldiers who witnessed such morbid spectacles surely took the risk of recapture and punishment into account when negotiating the price of defection.Footnote 26

Honour may have also inspired soldiers to remain loyal to their commanders. The Subadar Bim Naique, the South Asian soldier who testified against De la Cruz, was granted twenty-five dollars and “a handsome sword” as a reward for his service to the British Crown and the East India Company. Both of these prizes were “publically presented to the Subadar on the Parade, before all the troops in the name of the Honourable Company, as a mark of their approbation of his conduct, and their confidence in his fidelity.”Footnote 27

Mexican soldiers were another group of fighting men represented in Anda’s army. Several hundred of these soldiers would have been present in Manila and the greater Philippines archipelago when the British invaded the capital, as Mexico provided Manila with an annual allotment of silver and soldiers to support the administration and defence of the colony until the early nineteenth century. Stephanie Mawson and Eva Mehl’s respective studies of these soldiers show that the majority were mestizos (mixed race) and forzados (convicts) sentenced to complete terms of penal servitude on the frontier of the Spanish Empire.Footnote 28 Forzados had typically been convicted of property crimes such as highway robbery, or were “vagabonds, idlers and other men of ‘evil dispositions’ who were deemed unsuitable for integration into society in New Spain.”Footnote 29 This scholarship draws attention to the problems inherent in a convict army. Mawson argues that in the seventeenth century, forzados “were engaged in an almost constant mutiny against the system that judicially relegated them to forced labour. Return migration, violence, disobedience and mutiny were constant and persistent problems associated with every phase of the forzado system.”Footnote 30

Neither Mawson nor Mehl interrogate the actions and experiences of the forzados during the British occupation of Manila, as the crisis falls outside of the time frames of their respective studies. Nonetheless, their analysis would lead us to assume that these disorderly colonial workers might desert ranks whenever the opportunity to do so arose, and would not have been enthusiastic recruits to Anda’s army.

Yet Spanish and British sources do not indicate that forzados flocked to the British or ran away in significant numbers. On the contrary, the Manila Consultations present compelling evidence that these soldiers mobilised against the British in Anda’s army. Guachinagoes, the term the British used to refer to these mestizo soldiers, frequently appear in the Manila Council’s lists of prisoners of war. For example, the British captured “one Guachinangoe”, along with “one French deserter, one Spaniard … and Indians” in January 1763.Footnote 31 Captain Sleigh estimated that “Spanish” forces that warded off his attack on the town of Matolos on 22 January 1763 numbered “400 men” and included “three Padres [Catholic priests], the Alcalde [mayor], a great many Guachinangoes with an officer with them and two Frenchmen.”Footnote 32 In February, Admiral Cornish even ordered the transportation of “331 Guatchinangoe prisoners” to Madras.Footnote 33 There is frustratingly little written about the fate of these prisoners in the Manila Consultations, and their fate is ultimately unknown. However, what is clear is that the British did not trust these soldiers to fight with them.

This evidence challenges our assumptions about the bonds that tied Mexican convict soldiers to the Spanish Crown. Despite their “cultures of disobedience and criminality,” most of these men seemingly proved loyal during a crisis that threatened to destroy Spain’s Asian empire.Footnote 34 It is impossible to know with certainty why convict soldiers supported Anda’s campaign against the British. The most discontented forzados probably appreciated that the risks of defection to the unfamiliar British were high when compared to the known evils of Spanish colonial rule. It is plausible that these men chose to support the Spanish simply because waging war with Anda was more lucrative than fighting against him. Some men may have anticipated that the crown would reward their loyalty with a shortened sentence and the right to return home to their families in New Spain. It is also possible that a common Catholic faith united these soldiers behind Anda in the face of a Protestant enemy. Surely further clues to decoding forzados’ actions are buried in the colonial archive that is today scattered across multiple countries and continents.

Chinos: bargaining with the ‘other’

In the mid-eighteenth century, Manila was the only city in the Spanish empire with a large Chinese population. In 1762 approximately 7,000 Chinese lived in the Parián, Manila’s Chinese quarter, located just outside of the city walls. Many voices condemned the Chinese for collaborating with the invaders in the aftermath of the British invasion and occupation of the city. In June 1764, Simón de Anda wrote a letter to Charles III in which he accused this community of being traitors as well as godless heathens, and recommended that all Chinese be expelled from the Philippines. The king followed Anda’s advice, and the royal expulsion order arrived in Manila in 1767. A reported 2,460 Chinese were rounded up and forcibly removed from the Philippines between 1767 and 1772. Approximately 3,000 others fled the islands under the threat of violence before the expulsion was officially decreed.Footnote 35

The expulsion has lent legitimacy to the simplistic “Chinese as traitors” narrative that has characterised Anglo and Spanish historiographies of the British occupation of Manila since the early nineteenth century. In his 1803 History of the Philippine Islands, the Augustinian priest and historian Joaquín Martínez de Zúñiga asserted that “from the moment [the British] took possession of Manila, these Chinese gave them every aid and accompanied them in all their expeditions.”Footnote 36 Shirley Fish uncritically reproduced Zúñiga’s analysis of the role of the Chinese in the British occupation of Manila in her 2003 study of this event.Footnote 37 Yet British and Spanish records of the occupation indicate Chinese responses to the British invasion were far more complex than historians have acknowledged.

To be sure, there were many Chinese who aided the British in significant ways. Chinese soldiers were quickly integrated into the multi-ethnic British forces mobilised to fight against Anda’s rebel army. The British Captain Richard Bishop reported to the Manila Council that he employed fifty armed Chinese as sentinels in the fort of Cavite.Footnote 38 Spanish witnesses believed between 1,500 and 2,000 Chinese and Chinese mestizos joined the estimated 400 European and 300 sepoys who attacked royalist forces at Bulucán in April 1763.Footnote 39 As well as serving as soldiers, Chinese volunteers supported the British as local guides. Expert mariners made it possible for the invaders to navigate the rivers, estuaries, and coasts of the Philippines: Captain Backhouse had a Chinese pilot “who behaved like an angel.”Footnote 40 Chinese guides also helped the invaders traverse overland routes. The Spanish Augustinian missionary Agustín Maria de Castro y Amuedo claimed that the aides who helped the British army to discover Anda’s outpost at Bulucán “were all Chinese or mestizos, traitors to the motherland.”Footnote 41 The British also employed Chinese workers to remove the large copper bells hanging in church towers throughout the city and its hinterland to prevent Anda’s soldiers from seizing them to smelt and manufacture shot.Footnote 42 “Without the Chinese,” Anda said, “the English are not men.”Footnote 43

But not all the Chinese were Anda’s enemies. For as long as the occupation endured, Anda refused to accept Chinese disloyalty to Spain as inevitable. In May 1763, public notices printed in Castilian and Chinese and signed by Anda appeared in the urban neighbourhood of Santa Cruz, which had a large Chinese and Chinese mestizo population. In the name of the king these notices announced a general pardon for Chinese who remained in the area, on the condition that they register their presence and refrain from taking up arms against Spaniards or assisting the invaders in any other way.Footnote 44 Large numbers of Chinese and Chinese mestizos responded positively to Anda’s request for assistance. A recent study by Buschmann, Slack, and Tueller reveals that Antonio Tuazon, the rich and powerful Chinese merchant and captain of the guild of (Chinese) mestizos of Binondo, used his own resources to raise 1,500 Chinese and Chinese mestizo soldiers into a militia that fought alongside Anda.Footnote 45 This case reminds us that the occupation created a unique opportunity for Manila’s ethnically-diverse elites to demonstrate their fidelity to Spain, which they surely expected the king would reward once peace was restored.

British assumptions of Chinese disloyalty to the Spanish enabled them to be effective double-agents. It was not until mid-1763 that British captains began to realise the “Chinese are employed as spies.”Footnote 46 Captain Backhouse captured the “Chinese mestizo” Juan de la Cruz in possession of an incriminating commission signed by Don Josef Pedro del Busto, a prominent general in Simon de Anda’s army, and with a “list of soldiers … locked in his chest.” De la Cruz had allegedly escorted to a village just outside of Manila a group of ten or twelve Chinese who all had commissions from Anda “to act as Spies upon all occasions.” Cruz’s cooperation with the Spaniards cost him his life. Backhouse insisted on “hanging this Villain, and every other Commissary that I can catch,” in order to discourage other Chinese from working to undermine the British campaign.

Of course there were alternatives to siding with Anda or Drake. British and Spanish sources demonstrate numerous Manileños profiteered from the invasion without supporting either side. British officers frequently complained about Chinese shopkeepers in the Parián getting rich from swapping Spanish silver coins for rupees at unfair exchange rates. Captain Backhouse also accused the Chinese of doctoring specie; they manufactured “bad barillas, rupees or dollars” which they passed on to soldiers, but “refused to take again the moment after issued from their hands. This truth is very notorious.”Footnote 47 An inability to trust the Chinese eventually led the British to attempt to segregate the city’s Chinese population. In December 1763, the Manila Council “signed a proclamation ordering all the inhabitants of Santa Cruz,” to relocate to the Parián where they could be placed under surveillance.Footnote 48 In emulating a policy that Spanish colonial governments had enforced in the capital since the late sixteenth century, the British implicitly recognised the failure of their efforts to be embraced by Manileños as liberators.Footnote 49

Indian conquistadors

“The Black Legend,” or the view of the Spanish Empire as particularly depraved, detested by imperial subjects, and in a long period of decline after 1700 influenced British battlefield diplomacy in the Philippines.Footnote 50 Royal Navy and East India Company officials assumed that indios suffered great abuses under Spanish colonial rule and would welcome the British as liberators. This idea was made explicit in the East India Company’s secret January 1762 proposal to invade Manila, which noted “[t]he animosity of the natives against the Spaniards will, it may reasonably supposed, induce them rather to forward than obstruct” the British conquest of the islands.Footnote 51 Accordingly, one of Dawsonne Drake’s first moves as British governor of the colony was to attempt to negotiate a kind of capitulation agreement with the indios who lived in the city and its hinterland. Drake prepared and distributed manifestos written in Spanish and Tagalog that promised indigenous peoples who swore loyalty to George III would “be treated in every respect as his Britannick Majesty’s Subjects” and freed from servitude and the burden of tribute. The manifestos also assured indigenous peoples that they would be free to continue to practice Catholicism.Footnote 52 Yet such olive branches generally failed to achieve the desired results.

Indigenous people’s responses to the British invasion and occupation of Manila quickly disrupted romantic Anglo notions of empire by invitation.Footnote 53 During the siege British officers were surprised they could not persuade “the natives” to help build the batteries that would eventually destroy Manila’s walls “though all means were used to encourage them to come in.”Footnote 54 They were taken aback by the hundreds of indigenous soldiers who rushed to defend the Spanish government. General William Draper, commander of the British land forces in Manila, recalled how the indios, “although armed chiefly with bows, arrows, and lances … advanced up to the very muzzles of our pieces … and died like wild beasts, gnawing their bayonets.”Footnote 55 The engineer Captain William Stevenson noted constant attacks from “the natives … kept us in continual alarms.” They murdered “seamen straggling from their quarters” and slaughtered sleeping British troops camping in the Bagumbayan church just outside the city walls.Footnote 56 In January Stevenson insisted that his soldiers required protection from the “treachery of the Indian Inhabitants who are very numerous … their fidelity [can]not much to be depended on.”Footnote 57

Simon de Anda’s army—the unexpected loyalist resistance—essentially trapped the British forces in Manila’s walled citadel. The Augustinian Priest Fray Maria Castro recalled that the English “were more like prisoners in a presidio of the Catholic King than victorious soldiers.”Footnote 58 Drake had the same impression. In 1767 he described the hopelessness of the Manila offensive in a private letter penned to his brother-in law Admiral George Pocock;

As the enemy increased in Riches and numbers so did our fear & Danger. And I may well say that for 18 Months we were in a manner besieged by our unjust & unreasonable Enemies. Their Barbarities shocked human nature, murdering in all corners, cutting off & harassing those that dared to fetch us Provisions; so that we were obliged to send out Parties to fight for our Subsistence.Footnote 59

Understanding why indigenous peoples acted to preserve Spanish sovereignty requires recognising that indios were not a homogenous group in the Philippines. The fact that six major languages—Bikol, Ibang, Ilokano, Pangasinan, Kapampangan, and Tagalog—were spoken in the island of Luzon alone gives some indication of the diversity of indigenous peoples who inhabited the region most affected by the Seven Years’ War in the Pacific.Footnote 60 The majority of the indios who joined Anda’s army were Pampangans, or Kapampangan-speaking natives of Pampanga Province. While Tagalog troops were also numerous in the “Spanish” forces, it was the Pampangans proved to be the Spanish empire’s staunchest allies during the British occupation of Manila. In 1762, Anda established his government-in-exile in the Pampangan pueblo of Bacolor because of its people’s loyalty to the Spanish crown.Footnote 61 After the war, the king of Spain issued a Real Cédula (royal order) that acknowledged the “outstanding services of the Indians of the Pampanga Province” during the occupation.Footnote 62

The alliance between the Spaniards and the Pampangans was forged long before the Seven Years’ War began. This coalition can be traced back to 1594 when Pampangans helped Spaniards defend Manila from the attack of the Chinese pirate Limahong.Footnote 63 As the Tlaxcalans had been in Mexico, the Pampangans were the “Indian Conquistadors” of Spain’s Asian empire.Footnote 64 In the late seventeenth century, Pampangans participated alongside Spanish and Mexican soldiers in the military and spiritual conquest of the Mariana Islands. Many of the Pampangan soldiers deployed to the Marianas were also accompanied by their families; the Spaniards expected that these colonists would conduct themselves as model indios whom the newly conquered Chamorros could imitate.Footnote 65 In the eighteenth century, Pampangans collaborated with the Spanish to suppress indigenous uprisings that periodically erupted closer to Manila. For example, Pampangan soldiers were deployed alongside Spanish troops to put down uprisings in four indigenous pueblos in 1721.Footnote 66 Pampangan soldiers were fully integrated into Spain’s Pacific network of presidios (forts) by 1740, and frequently accounted for half of all soldiers deployed at each outpost.Footnote 67 This evidence testifies to the great trust Spanish military leaders placed in their indigenous allies, whom they made responsible for cannons and fortifications, the core components of Spain’s system of imperial defence in the archipelago.

Why did Pampangans elect to develop and maintain this extended coalition with the Spanish in the Philippines? John Leddy Phelan argued this alliance was a rational response to the geopolitical hazards both groups confronted. In the seventeenth century the Pampangans benefited from the protection Spaniards provided against the “fierce Sambals who periodically terrorised the fertile [Pampanga] valley.”Footnote 68 While not ruling out the strategic military advantages of the Pampangan-Spanish alliance, I suggest this relationship was strengthened by a common Catholic faith.

From the beginning, the Spanish conceived of the British invasion and occupation of Manila as a holy war. When the British began bombarding the city walls, Archbishop Rojo told Manileños he had “seen the angel of the Lord, sent forth from the Almighty, to destroy the army of the heretics before their city, like the host of Sennacherib”Footnote 69 Pampangans were among the first indigenous converts to Catholicism in the Philippines. Pampangan women became beatas (pious laywomen) and young men trained as priests in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. By 1903, Pampanga would boast more churches than any other province in the Philippines.Footnote 70 It is likely that many of the Pampangans who joined Anda’s army were persuaded by the merits of the mission to eradicate Protestants from their homeland.

For all of the Pamapangans and other indios who joined Anda’s army, their Catholic faith and relationships with the regular clergy proved a solid foundation for their fidelity to Spain during an acute imperial crisis. At the beginning of the occupation Anda expressed his confidence in the clergy’s power to persuade their flocks to fight against the Protestant invaders. In a letter to Archbishop Rojo written on the 8 October 1763, Anda emphasised that “the natives venerate their parish priests, ministers, and missionaries” with “respect and love.” He rationalised that the indios’ devotion to priests, combined with the clergy’s “greater knowledge of the nature, customs, and civilization of the natives, can maintain them and incite them to the defence of the country against the English enemy.”Footnote 71 It seems that Anda expected priests to perform the role of intermediaries, bargaining directly with indigenous parishioners to win their support for the Spanish campaign.

All evidence points to the clergy’s compliance with Anda’s wishes. As the historian Roberto Blanco Andrés has suggested, the power of the church in Philippines society extended far beyond its economic resources. Priests were the “bastions” of Spanish domination in the islands. The clergy dissuaded their parishioners from collaborating with the British and actively encouraged them to participate in the Spanish resistance.Footnote 72 In May 1763, for example, Captain Backhouse arrested several priests he caught supporting Anda’s army red-handed. Backhouse told Drake he was initially persuaded by one Padre Montero’s apparent willingness to cooperate with the British when they marched into the pueblo of Lipa where Montero was prior. Montero “made a show of service, by promises and some other appearances.” But he proved to be a “false trumpet.” The prior had allegedly threatened to cut out the tongues of traitors who collaborated with the enemy. He also had gunpowder stashed away in the convent, which Backhouse assumed was for Anda’s army.Footnote 73 Padre Montero was not an anomaly. The British arrested at least eight Augustinian missionaries, including Padre Esteban, for “endeavouring to seduce a man to desertion” from British forces. Drake decided against executing priests to avoid “greatly irritating the minds of the people.” Death penalties were reduced to fines and imprisonment.Footnote 74

The clergy were not only whispering words of encouragement into parishioners’ ears. Augustinians and Dominicans promoted the active participation of indios in Spanish forces by actively participating in Anda’s army themselves. The Augustinian friar Agustin Maria de Castro y Amuedo’s vivid account of the bloody battle between the British and Spanish forces at Bulucán celebrates the heroic efforts of priests who not only dug trenches and transported guns, but effectively became soldiers. Castro recalls how Friar Agustin de San Antonio valiantly mounted a horse with his sword in hand and broke through enemy lines, implying that the priest-warrior slew a few enemy soldiers before he himself was killed. Of course the historian should recognise that Castro’s narrative might exaggerate the good works he and his fellow Augustinians carried out in service of their God and king, however much British sources substantiate Castro’s testimony.Footnote 75 Yet British officers observed “The Augustine Friars … appeared in Arms, contrary to their ecclesiastical functions thereby occasioning the effusion of much Human Blood.”Footnote 76 It seems that devout indigenous people were more willing to fight with Anda when they could do so alongside their parish priests.

The invading army’s systematic pillaging of churches and convents offended and alienated potential indigenous allies. Drake recognised this problem and attempted to protect select sacred objects in order to gain local support. In March 1763, the Manila Council ordered Captain Backhouse to return the “Malay virgin and black Jesus” his men removed from the Augustinian Convent at Guadalupe.Footnote 77 Backhouse reported that the community staged an elaborate celebration to welcome home the revered icon. He described how “the Virgin Mary … was carried away in great state and procession, she was accompanied by a thousand people at least in canoes and boats finely decorated.” Backhouse himself “accompanied our Holy Mother till I saw her safe Lodged in the Church without Arms or attendance.” He was confident the restoration of the icon “had good effect, & numbers of the Malays men and women came to Pasig the same night to return thanks for the Honour I had done and the Confidence I had placed in them.”Footnote 78 However the majority of sacred objects the invaders stole were never given back to their communities, creating distress and anger among a deeply religious people, and strengthening their ties to Anda.

The confiscation and destruction of private property further increased the willingness of indios to support Anda’s campaign to defeat the British. British soldiers frequently stole cattle from indigenous pueblos.Footnote 79 Moreover, the British pursued a scorched-earth policy in smaller towns and agricultural regions surrounding the capital, burning villages to the ground to eliminate places where enemy armies could hide or congregate.Footnote 80 Violence by “British” forces against indios was the norm in 1762–64: as Backhouse quite poetically observed, “War in her mildest dress is too severe where the innocent fall in her way”.Footnote 81

“Throwing Off the Spanish Yoke”

The British invasion and occupation of Manila interrupted 191 years of unbroken Spanish control of the city. Spain’s loss of its capital in the Philippines created an unprecedented opportunity for a range of imperial subjects to contest the Spanish colonial regime with the aid of the British. The Manila Council’s battlefield diplomacy succeeded in establishing alliances with multiple local actors who were opposed to Spanish colonial rule.

The Sultan of Sulu, Azim ud-Din, and his son Muhammad Israel were prisoners of the Spanish government in Manila when the British invaded. Years earlier, the sultan had been an ally of the Spanish. In 1737 he brokered a peace treaty with the Spanish government that ended the hostilities in the southern Philippines archipelago and permitted Catholic missionaries to work in his lands. In 1749, after he survived an assassination attempt, Azim ud-Din converted to Catholicism and travelled to Manila with his son and heir to seek protection from the Spanish colonial government. The interim Governor of the Philippines, Bishop Juan de Arechederra, was happy to oblige and staged an elaborate “public entry” to officially welcome these important converts to the capital. However relations between the sultan and the Spanish broke down shortly thereafter when colonial officials began to suspect that Aim ud-Din was scheming to betray Spain’s Asian empire, leading to the sultan and his son’s imprisonment in the capital.Footnote 82

If there was one person who truly welcomed the British into Manila as liberators it was Azim ud-Din. An alliance between the sultan and the British had actually been in the making for some time before the occupation began. While in captivity in Manila, the sultan managed to maintain secret communication with friends in the Sulu Sultanate as well as British agents. In November 1761, he even signed a trade agreement with his brother, Sultan Bantilan, and the East India Company.Footnote 83 During the British occupation of Manila, Azim ud-Din and his son entered into another mutual defence and trade treaty with the East India Company. The treaty granted the Company the right to “erect Forts or Factories” in Jolo, the capital of the Sulu Sultanate, and its dependent territories. The East India Company escorted Azim ud-Din and his son to Jolo in 1763. To kick-start a healthy trading relationship between the two parties, the Company also “advanced to Prince Israel the sum of 1,000 Dollars” that he was to repay “in the goods of his Country.”Footnote 84 Although it falls outside of the parameters of this article, it is noteworthy that the sultan’s relationship with the British continued into the early nineteenth century, underscoring the enduring British goal of establishing a colony in the Philippine Islands.Footnote 85

Two major indigenous rebellions broke out in northern Luzon after Manila fell to the British. Diego Silang led an armed uprising in the Ilocos Province in the northwest of Luzon, and Juan De la Cruz Palaris headed a revolt in Pangasinan Province, situated immediately south of Ilocos. Thousands of indigenous people mobilised behind Silang and Palaris between 1762 and 1764. These violent rebellions demanded radical reforms to the colonial order in the Philippines. In December 1762, when Silang and a mob of 2,000 armed indios protested at the residence of the Spanish alcalde at Vigan, the capital of the Ilocos Province, they demanded the abolition of tribute and forced labour.Footnote 86 They also demanded the replacement of the alcalde and the principalia (indigenous and mestizo elites) who facilitated the exploitation of indigenous people.Footnote 87

The Palaris rebellion erupted in the Binalatongan pueblo in Pangasinan Province also in late 1762, when indios refused to pay the annual tribute and demanded earlier tribute payments be refunded. Local priests tried to negotiate a peaceful solution to the crisis and offered to suspend the collection of tribute as long as the British occupied Manila. The rebels rejected this compromise. Juan De la Cruz Palaris ordered all Spaniards to abandon the province, including Spanish priests. Most missionaries were subsequently forced to flee the province as the rebels torched churches and convents.Footnote 88 The Palaris rebellion spread like wildfire across Pangasinan. At its peak in December 1763, an estimated 10,000 indigenous people assembled in the pueblo of San Carlos and insisted their demands be met. The mob set fire to a Dominican church and convent, underscoring their collective anger towards a disliked priest, if not a marked, anti-clergy agenda.

Shrewdly exploiting inter-imperial rivalry, Diego Silang attempted to bargain with British and Spanish officials in order to meet his objectives. In 1762 he wrote to Anda, declaring that his desire to remove the corrupt principalia from power did not undermine his loyalty to the King of Spain or his commitment to defeating the British.Footnote 89 Silang simultaneously pursued an alliance with the invaders.Footnote 90 In May he wrote to a letter to the Manila Council in which he recognised George III “as my king and master,” provided that the Ilocanos were released from tribute and allowed to continue practicing their religion. Silang was clearly aware of the olive branch manifestos the British had circulated in the early stages of the occupation. He was a wise negotiator; he sent the council a gift of “twelve loaves of sugar, twelve baskets of Calamy (sticky rice), and 200 cakes or balls of Chocolate,” to demonstrate the genuineness of his promises and the tangible benefits that would accrue to the British from an alliance. The British enthusiastically accepted Silang’s offer. Soon after receiving his letter and gift, the Manila Council dispatched to Illocos fifty soldiers (twenty Europeans and thirty sepoys), with weapons and ammunition, under the command of Lieutenant Russell to support Silang against Anda’s troops who had mobilised to put down the rebellion.Footnote 91

There is no evidence that Palaris or other leaders of the Pangasinan rebellion reached out to the British as Silang did, although the British certainly attempted to organise a coalition with these rebels too. When the Manila Council “received advice that the Province of Pangasinan had revolted from Senor Anda” in March 1763, it promptly resolved to dispatch “a letter to the Governor and Chiefs of the province, offering them our Friendship and Protection, promising to assist them as much as in our Power and to secure them the free exercise of their religion with an open commerce.”Footnote 92

In the absence of a response, the British issued another proposal to the Pangasinan rebels in May 1763. “If you will continue to oppose these evil Designs of the Malecontents,” the term they used to describe Anda and his army, “we will enter into an Alliance with you and when our ships which are shortly expected arrive we will send you such an assistance as with troops of your Province and Illocos will enable us (with Gods Blessing) to crush Mr. Anda and his faction. You shall enjoy every liberty you can hope or expect.”Footnote 93 We do not know if any leaders of the uprising in Pangasinan ever received this correspondence. If they did, they apparently chose to ignore British invitations to form a united front against Anda’s army. The thousands of indios who rose up against the Spanish in Pangasinan were not desirous of liberation by the British.

If the British occupation of Manila created a space for indigenous people to rise up in rebellion, it also provided the Spanish colonial regime with an opportunity to destroy this challenge to its legitimacy and authority. In addition to fighting against the British, Simón de Anda’s army waged war against the “domestic” threats to Spain’s Asian empire. Just as the clergy played a decisive role in the formation of an army to fight against the British, they influenced loyal indios’ decisions to participate in the violent campaign to supress the Silang and Palaris rebellions. Diego Silang complained that the Augustinians “have pursued us as if we were wild boars, [and] neither has our submission, nor laying down our arms and crying for mercy availed us in the least for a further security.”Footnote 94 The indio Miguel Bicus killed Silang in early June of 1763, doing so with the blessing of Bishop Fray Bernardo de Ustáriz.Footnote 95 When Silang’s widow Gabriela Estrada continued to lead the rebellion in Ilocos after his death, the Augustinians raised an army of between 8,000 and 9,000 indigenous soldiers that continued to engage in battles and skirmishes against the rebels. The rebellion in Illocos was finally put down when Estrada and more than ninety other rebels were captured and hanged in late September 1763.Footnote 96

The Dominicans played a crucial role in the suppression of the Palaris revolt. Fray Pedro Ire attempted to mediate a general pardon of the Pangasinan rebels on Anda’s behalf. In February 1763. He urged the Pangasinans to be obedient and loyal to royal authority, because “God commands it.”Footnote 97 Fray Andrés Meléndez, the priest at Lingayen, the capital of Pangasinan, refused to minister to his parishioners until they agreed to accept a Spanish alcalde in their city and withdraw their support from Palaris. The Dominicans also took it upon themselves to gather 4,000 pledges from indios in Pangasinan to fight with Anda’s forces against the rebels.Footnote 98 In these ways the missionary order contributed to the erosion of support for the Palaris’ rebellion, which effectively ended in early 1764, long before Palaris himself was finally captured and executed in 1765.

The defeat of these two great rebellions bolstered Spanish rule over the Philippines. The extremely violent and ultimately successful suppression of these uprisings ushered in a long peace between indigenous peoples and the Spanish colonial government in northern Luzon. The gallows constructed in the Pangasinan town of Malasiqui to hang the rebels who joined the Palaris rebellion stood for two decades as a conspicuous reminder of the fate of those who dared to challenge Spanish colonial rule.Footnote 99 Another major indigenous uprising would not emerge in Luzon until 1807.Footnote 100

Conclusion

The unfurling tentacles of European empires into the Indo-Pacific world was a complex process negotiated on the ground in Manila and other sites on the periphery of rival European colonies. The Royal Navy and East India Company’s joint campaign to conquer the capital of the Philippines, an important stage in the formation of the Second British Empire, hinged on preserving the fidelity of their own motley army mobilised from Madras and creating coalitions with the Spain’s enemies within its Asian empire. The bargains British officials brokered with the soldiers they brought from India fell short of stopping many of them from defecting to Simón de Anda’s army. Although the invaders forged friendships with the Sultan of Sulu, the rebel Diego Silang, and sections of Manila’s large Chinese community, they failed to win over the hearts and minds of the majority of indios.

The Black Legend blinded the British to the complexities of the real balance of power in the Philippines. Simón de Anda better understood the relationships that bound imperial subjects to the Spanish monarchy, particularly the importance of a shared Catholic faith. With the clergy’s crucial support and mountains of silver at his disposal, Anda motivated thousands of men from diverse parts of Asia and beyond to fight to restore Spanish sovereignty over the Philippines. It was the actions of these ordinary soldiers that ultimately prevented the British from tightening their grip on Manila and seizing control of the country beyond the walled centre of the city. Spain’s indigenous allies eventually defeated not only the British invaders, but also the indigenous peoples who rose up in rebellion in Ilocos and Pangasinan, thereby shoring up a colonial regime that endured until the end of the nineteenth century.

Footnotes

*

Kristie Patricia Flannery is a PhD student in the Department of History at the University of Texas at Austin. Her dissertation “Building Spain’s Asian Empire in the Age of Revolutions, 1749-1812” is a social and political history of imperial legitimacy based on extensive multi-site archival research. Versions of this article were workshopped at the Fifth International History Graduate Student Intensive at the University of Sydney, the Summer Institute on Contested Global Landscapes at Cornell University, and the American Historical Association’s annual conference. The author would like to thank those who generously provided helpful feedback on earlier drafts in these forums, as well as Jorge Cañizares Esguerra, Bruce Cruikshank, Ruth de Llobert, and the anonymous reviewers recruited by Itinerario.

1 William Draper, “Draper to the Secretary at War, Manila, 2 November 1762,” in Cushner, ed., Documents, 45.

2 Juan Grau y Monfalcón, “Memorial to the King (1635),” in Blair and Robertson, eds., The Philippine Islands, 1493–1898, 48.

3 On the composition of British forces, see “Cornish to Cleveland” in Cushner, ed., Documents, 30–32; Reference MehlTracy, Manila Ransomed, 17; and Reference EscotoMarshall, The Making and Unmaking of Empires, 61, 64. On the Indian Ocean slave trade see Pedro Reference CorpuzMachado, “A Forgotten Corner of the Indian Ocean,” 17–32.

4 Manilha Consultations, 5.127.

5 Although historians recognise the Seven Years’ War as the “first global war,” Asia is marginalised in most studies of this conflict, which remain centred on the Atlantic world. The tendency to diminish the relevance of Spain’s involvement in this conflict has also contributed to the neglect of Manila. Daniel Baugh, for example, describes this as a war between Great Britain and France, “the two most advanced monarchies of Europe.” Baugh, The Global Seven Years War, 1; see also Anderson, Crucible of War. The British foray into Manila has also been neglected in studies of the Second British Empire and the British East India Company. Philip Lawson makes only one reference to Manila in his well-known synthesis of the East India Company’s history. Similarly, the British occupation of Manila is but a footnote in Philip Stern’s more detailed treatment of the Company’s early expansion. J. Marshall briefly discusses the British occupation of Manila in his history of the British Empire from 1750 to 1783, but only to illustrate the struggle of the East India Company and Royal Navy to recruit British soldiers in the Indian Ocean world. Reference Buschmann, Slack and TuellerLawson, The East India Company, 139; Reference MarshallStern. The Company-State; and Reference EscotoMarshall, The Making and Unmaking of Empires, 61, 64.

6 Draper, Colonel Draper’s Answer, to the Spanish Arguments; Entick, General History, 441–33; Fish, When Britain Ruled the Philippines; and Reference MehlTracy, Manila Ransomed.

7 This narrative has a long lineage; see José Montero y Vidal, Historia General de Filipinas. This narrative was upheld in the Portal de Archivos Españoles’ commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the Occupation of Manila: http://www.mcu.es/archivos/Novedades/novedades_Documentos_Pares.html (accessed 15 May 2013).

8 Reference MachadoRoutledge, Diego Silang and the Origins of Philippine Nationalism; Reference FraderaPalanco, “Diego Silang’s Revolt”; and Arcilla, “The Pangasinan Uprising.”

9 Reference CrailsheimMapp, The Elusive West and the Contest for Empire, 1713–1763, 261–82.

10 This study is influenced by and engages with recent scholarship that explores the interconnections between the simultaneous disintegration of American empires in the expansion of empire in the Indo-Pacific world in the Age of Revolution; Reference EscotoMarshall, The Making and Unmaking of Empires; Bayly, The Birth of the Modern World; and Reference Blanco AndrésFradera, La Nación Imperial (1750–1918).

11 Chakraborty, “Desertion in the Company Settlements in Early Eighteenth Century Bengal.”

12 Manilha Consultations, 5.163.

13 Manilha Consultations, 6.2; Manilha Consultations, 5.5, 70–71, 74, 164–65.

14 Manilha Consultations, 5.129 and 6.155. To put these monetary values into perspective, in the eighteenth century British Army soldiers’ wages were set at 8d per day, or roughly £12 or 48 reales de ocho per annum. See Peter Reference Montero y VidalWay, “Rebellion of the Regulars.”

15 Manilha Consultations, 5.127 and 6.79; and AGI Filipinas, 388, N.57. Navarro, ed., Documentos Indispensables, 72, claims the Filipino delivered the sum of 1.9 million pesos to Anda’s government in exile.

16 Manilha Consultations 5.129 and 6.79.

17 “Stevenson’s Account of the Capture of Manila, Written 10 November 1762”, in Cushner, ed., Documents, 82–88; and Viana, “Diaro Del Sitio de La Plaza de Manila Por Los Ingleses,” in Navarro, ed., Documentos Indispensables, 463.

18 Reference PalancoZúñiga, Estadismo de Las Islas Filipinas, 64.

19 Manilha Consultations, 3. 37

20 For example, in early 1763 British Major Fell and Captain Backhouse advised their superiors “the desertion of the Soldiers, Seapoys and Lascars has been great.” Manilha Consultations, 5.70.

21 AGI Filipinas, 923, N.24.

22 AGI Filipinas 927.

23 AGI, Filipinas, 924.

24 The overhaul of Manila’s military defenses is examined in Gutiérrez, Manila, Plaza Fuerte.

25 Manilha Consultations, 5.131–32.

26 Manilha Consultation, 6. 175.

27 Manilha Consultations, 6.174–75.

28 Reference EscotoMawson, “Unruly Plebeians,” 693–730; and Reference FishMehl, “The Spanish Empire and The Pacific World.”

29 Reference EscotoMawson, “Unruly Plebeians,” 7.

30 Ibid., 21.

31 Manilha Consultations, 5.7.

32 Ibid., 20.

33 Ibid., 61, 69.

34 Reference EscotoMawson, “Unruly Plebeians,” 5.

35 P. Fr. Agustin Maria de Castro y Amuedo, “Relacion Sucinta, Clara y Veridica de La Toma de Manila Por La Escuadra Inglesa (1770),” in Navarro, ed., Documentos Indispensables. See Capitulo 6 “De la Oculta Traición Que Tenían Tramada Los Chinos Que Viven en Filipinas Contra el Sr. Gobernador Anda,” 78–82; Escoto, “Expulsion of the Chinese”; idem, “A Supplement to the Expulsion of the Chinese”; and AGI Filipinas 713.

36 Reference Oudijk and RestallZúñiga, An Historical View of the Philippine Islands, 655–68.

37 Fish, When Britain Ruled the Philippines, 160. This interpretation is also found in broader histories of the Philippines including Corpuz, The Roots of the Filipino Nation, 307–308.

38 Manilha Consultations, 5.79.

39 Escoto, “Expulsion of the Chinese,” 60.

40 Manhila Consultations, 5. 62.

41 Castro y Amuedo “Relación Sucinta,” in Navarro, ed., Documentos Indispensables, 67.

42 Manilha Consultations, 5.152.

43 AGI Filipinas, 683.

44 Manilha Consultations, 5.131–32.

45 Buschmann, Navigating the Spanish Lake. See chapter 3,“Arming Chinese Mestizos in Manila,” 63–96.

46 Manilha Consultations, 5.152.

47 Ibid., 232.

48 Ibid.

49 Reference MappSantamaria, “The Chinese Parian,” 67–118; and Reference AndersonFlannery, Prohibited Games, Prohibited People.

50 Reference Luengo GutiérrezRestall, “The Decline and Fall of the Spanish Empire,” 183–94.

51 “Rough Sketch of an Expedition to M[anil]a, mentioned to Lord A[nson] on the 8th, 11th, and 12th Inst. January 1762.” In Cushner, ed., Documentos, 12–15.

52 Manilha Consultations, 5.9.

53 Compare Schneider, “The Occupation of Havana,” 119.

54 “Stevenson’s Account of the Capture of Manila,” in Cushner, ed., Documents, 82–88.

55 Entick, The General History of the Late War, 419–20.

56 Stevenson’s Account of the Capture of Manila,” in Cushner, ed., Documents, 82–88.

57 Manilha Consultations, 5. 1–2.

58 Castro, “Relacion Sucinta,” 71.

59 “Mr. Drake with a Full Relation of His Proceedings While Governor of Manilla,” in Papers of Sir George Pocock, The Huntington Library, PO 1024.

60 Reference IrvingPhelan, The Hispanization of the Philippines, 17–18, 180.

61 AGI, Filipinas, 388, N.51.

62 AGI, Filipinas, 335, N.17.

63 Reference BaylyLarkin, The Pampangans, 22–23; and Reference IrvingPhelan, The Hispanization of the Philippines, 146.

64 “Indian conquistadores” were not unusual in the Spanish Empire, although their presence has not been widely recognised Spain’s Asian empire. Recent studies have drawn attention to the roles Spain’s indigenous allies played in the conquest of the Americas in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. See Reference FowlerOudijk and Restall, eds., Indian Conquistadors.

65 Hezel and Driver, “From Conquest to Colonization,”141; and AGI, Filipinas, 349, N.6.

66 AGI, Filipinas,133, N.11

67 The large fort of Cavite was guarded by three companies of Spaniards and one Pampanga Company. The fort named for Our Lady of the Rosary at Iloilo was guarded by forty Spanish and thirty-six Pampangan soldiers. Six Spanish and five Pampanga soldiers were posted to the much smaller fort of Saint Joseph at Capinatan. Fernando Valdés Tamón, Manila (Filipinas) Planos de Población (1739), BNE.

68 Reference IrvingPhelan, The Hispanization of the Philippines.

69 Entick, The General History of the Late War, 417.

70 Fowler, “Illuminated Islands”; and Reference BaylyLarkin, The Pampangans, 13, 58–59.

71 Manilha Consultations, 5.102; Blair and Robertson, The Philippine Islands, 49.133. Notably, the majority of the regular clergy could communicate with indios in their native tongues; since 1603 the Spanish Crown required that missionaries “know the language of the indios whom he should instruct.” Reference LawsonRafael, Contracting Colonialism,18–19.

72 Blanco Andres, Entre Frailes y Clerigos, 78–79.

73 Manilha Consultations, 5.135–36.

74 Manilha Consultations, 6.216–17; “Cornish to the Earl of Halifax, Parliament Street, 3 September 1764,” In Cushner, ed., Documents, 206–208.

75 Castro y Amuedo “Relación Sucinta,” in Navarro, ed., Documentos Indispensables, 67–70.

76 Manilha Consultations 5.30.

77 Ibid., 5.3.

78 Ibid.

79 Ibid., 5.134.

80 Ibid., 5.162–63.

81 Ibid., 5.134.

82 Crailsheim, “The Baptism of Sultan Azim ud-Din,” 93–120.

83 Reference LarkinQuiason, English “Country Trade” with the Philipines, 112–38.

84 The Manhila Consultations, 6.71–72.

85 Reference MawsonTarling, Sulu and Sabah; Reference Melo AlioWarren, The Sulu Zone, 1768–1898; and Reference Blanco AndrésIrving. Colonial Counterpoint, 221–22.

86 Reference FraderaPalanco, “Diego Silang’s Revolt,” 512–37.

87 In the mid-eighteenth century, every indio was required to belong to a barangay, a political unit which consisted of an average of thirty families, and headed by a hereditary leader known as a cabeza de barangay. There were 6,000 barangays in the Philippines in 1768. Multiple barangays came to together in pueblos ruled by gobernadorcillos, which literally translates to “little governors”. Cabezas de barangay and gobernadorcillos formed the principalia or indigenous ruling class; the principalia also incorporated other elite Indians exempted from tribute, such as the cantores who sang in church services across the archipelago. Irving, Colonial Counterpoint, 35.

88 Arcilla, “The Pangasinan Uprising” 38.

89 Reference MachadoRoutledge, Diego Silang, 21.

90 Manhila Consultations, 5.102.

91 Ibid.

92 Ibid., 5.76.

93 Ibid., 5.133.

94 Ibid., 97–99, 102; and Reference MachadoRoutledge, Diego Silang 128–29.

95 Much twentieth-century Filipino historiography has identified Miguel Bicus or Vicus as a Spanish mestizo, but Anda’s letter and the Real Cédula clearly identify him as an indio. See Reference FlanneryAlio, Political and Cultural History of the Philippines, 22–25; Another Real Cédula relieved from the payment of tribute for the rest of their lives the field master (maestro de campo) Pedro Bicbic and his sons, as a reward for their “contributions to the subjugation of the rebels in the province of Pangasinan.” AGI Filipinas, 335, N.17

96 Reference FraderaPalanco, “Diego Silang’s Revolt,” 529–32.

97 Arcilla, “The Pangasinan Uprising, 1762–1765”, 47.

98 Ibid., 38–39; and Reference ArcillaFonseca, Historia de los PP. Dominicos en Las Islas, 675.

99 “Relación del viaje de D. José Basco y Vargas gobernador y capitán general de las Filipinas, a las provincias de Pangasinan e Ilocos.” AMN, Ms. 136, Doc. 10: 12 April 1785, Manila. Ff. 310–43; Manilha Consultations, 5, 138.

100 Roberto Blanco Andrés, “La Revuelta de Ilocos de 1807,” 43–72.

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Figure 0

Figure 1 Map of the Philippine Islands.