| The 
                            Philippine Revolution Against Spain   1996 
                          is a significant year for Filipinos all over the world. 
                          It marks the centennial of the Philippine Revolution, 
                          which started in 1896 and officially ended in 1902. 
                          The amount of literature generated during and after 
                          the Revolution, coupled with the continuing fascination 
                          on this period by historians and alike which have produced 
                          an infinite number of scholarly works, have validated 
                          the widespread perception that this was the most glorious 
                          page in the history of the Filipino people. The Philippine 
                          Revolution ended more than three centuries of Spanish 
                          colonial rule which began when Miguel 
                          Lopez de Legazpi founded the settlement of Cebu, 
                          the oldest Philippine city, in 1565. The Revolution 
                          is also heralded as the first anti-colonial independence 
                          movement in Asia. The Filipino proclamation of their 
                          independence two years after the outbreak of the Revolution 
                          was a momentous event for Filipinos of all persuasion. 
                          The Revolution began with the masses through the Katipunan, 
                          a secret, revolutionary, mass-based organization, and 
                          was later embraced by the middle class. Indeed, the 
                          Revolution was one of the few times where there was 
                          a convergence in the nationalist movements of the masses 
                          and the elite.
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