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  1. Pedro Alejandro Paterno y de Vera Ignacio (February 27, 1857 – April 26, 1911) was a Filipino politician infamous for being a turncoat. He was also a poet and a novelist. His intervention on behalf of the Spanish led to the signing of the Pact of Biak-na-Bato on December 14, 1897, an account of which he published in 1910.

  2. Jan 21, 2022 · Inside The “Royal” Life of Philippine History’s Ultimate “Balimbing”. Due to his ignominious title of being the greatest turncoat/balimbing in Philippine history, Pedro Paterno’s life and works are pretty much ignored today—which is too bad, because a review of his biography would reveal the hilariously histrionic workings of the ...

  3. Abstract: Pedro Paterno (1858-1911) is widely regarded as a 'traitor' to the Philippine nation. That reputation has its origins in his role in the negotiation of the 1897 Pact of Biac-na-Bato between the Philippine revolutionaries and the Spanish, under which the former agreed to abandon their struggle and collaborate with the.

  4. Grounded in a detailed analysis of the lives and works of Pedro Paterno, T.H. Pardo de Tavera, and Isabelo de los Reyes, the book is a richly textured portrait of a generation that created the self-consciousness of the Filipino nation.

  5. Seated from left to right: Pedro Paterno and Emilio Aguinaldo with five companions. The Pact of Biak-na-Bato, signed on December 14, 1897, [3] [4] created a truce between Spanish colonial Governor-General Fernando Primo de Rivera and the revolutionary leader Emilio Aguinaldo to end the Philippine Revolution.

  6. Jul 26, 2015 · Pedro Alejandro Paterno ( 1858 – 1911) was a Filipino statesman and groundbreaking author. wrote the Pact of Biak-na-Bato. wrote the very first Filipino novel written in Tagalog, Ninay (1907) wrote the first Filipino collection of poems in Spanish, Sampaguitas y poesias (Jasmines and Poems), published in Madrid in 1880.

  7. Yet Pedro Paterno did just that, rendering Jose Rizal at a loss for words courtesy of his crazy theory that the pre-Spanish Filipinos practiced a proto-Christian religion way before the Spaniards arrived.

  8. Oct 18, 2018 · Pedro Paterno (1858–1911) is widely regarded as a ‘traitor’ to the Philippine nation. That reputation has its origins in his role in the negotiation of the 1897 Pact of Biac-na-Bato between the Philippine revolutionaries and the Spanish, under which the former agreed to abandon their struggle and collaborate with the colonial administration.

  9. Pedro Paterno (1858–1911) is widely regarded as atraitor’ to the Philippine nation. That reputation has its origins in his role in the negotiation of the 1897 Pact of Biac-na-Bato between the Phi...

  10. Pedro Alejandro Paterno y de Vera Ignacio was a Filipino politician infamous for being a turncoat. He was also a poet and a novelist.

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