Revolutionary Government of the Philippines | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1898–1899 | |||||||||
Anthem: Marcha Nacional Filipina (English: "Philippine National March")[a] | |||||||||
Status | Unrecognized state | ||||||||
Capital | Bacoor (June 1898 – August 1898) Malolos (August 1898 – January 1899) | ||||||||
Common languages | Spanish, Tagalog | ||||||||
Religion | Roman Catholicism, Islam, Indigenous Philippine folk religions | ||||||||
Government | Revolutionary republic | ||||||||
President | |||||||||
• 1898–1899 | Emilio Aguinaldo | ||||||||
President of the Cabinet | |||||||||
• 1899 | Apolinario Mabini | ||||||||
Legislature | None (rule by decree) (June 23 – September 15, 1898) Malolos Congress (from 1898) | ||||||||
Historical era | Philippine Revolution | ||||||||
• Established | June 23, 1898 | ||||||||
August 13, 1898 | |||||||||
December 10, 1898 | |||||||||
January 23, 1899 | |||||||||
Currency | Philippine peso | ||||||||
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The Revolutionary Government of the Philippines (Spanish: Gobierno Revolucionario de Filipinas) was a revolutionary government established in the Spanish East Indies on June 23, 1898, during the Spanish–American War, by Emilio Aguinaldo, its initial and only president.[3] The government succeeded a dictatorial government that had been established by Aguinaldo on June 18[4] and was dissolved and replaced by this government upon its establishment.[5][6] This government endured until January 23, 1899, when the proclamation of the Malolos Constitution established an insurgent Philippine Republic government that replaced it.[7][8]
Four governmental departments were initially created, each having several bureaus: foreign relations, marine, and commerce; war and public works; police, justice, instruction, and hygiene; finance, agriculture, and industry.[9] A revolutionary congress was established with power "[t]o watch over the general interest of the Philippine people, and carrying out of the revolutionary laws; to discuss and vote upon said laws; to discuss and approve, prior to their ratification, treaties and loans; to examine and approve the accounts presented annually by the secretary of finance, as well as extraordinary and other taxes which may hereafter be imposed."[10]
On August 14, 1898, two days after the Battle of Manila of the Spanish–American War and about two months after Aguinaldo's proclamation of this revolutionary government, the United States established a military government in the Philippines, with General Merritt acting as military governor.[11]
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