翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Cry Myself to Sleep
・ Cry No More
・ Cry No More (Mika Nakashima song)
・ Cry No More (Shareefa song)
・ Cry Now, Laugh Later
・ Cry of a Prostitute
・ Cry of Achilles
・ Cry of Alcorta
・ Cry of Asencio
・ Cry of Battle
・ Cry of Dolores
・ Cry of Fear
・ Cry of Jazz
・ Cry of Love (band)
・ Cry of Morning
Cry of Nueva Ecija
・ Cry of Pugad Lawin
・ Cry of Silence
・ Cry of Tarlac
・ Cry of the Afflicted
・ Cry of the Banshee
・ Cry of the City
・ Cry of the Hunted
・ Cry of the Innocent
・ Cry of the Justice Bird
・ Cry of the Kalahari
・ Cry of the Lonely
・ Cry of the Peacock
・ Cry of the Peacock (novel)
・ Cry of the Werewolf


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Cry of Nueva Ecija : ウィキペディア英語版
Cry of Nueva Ecija

The first Cry of Nueva Ecija (Filipino: ''Sigaw ng Nueba Esiha'') (Spanish: ''Grito de Nueva Ecija'') occurred September 2–5, 1896, in the province of Nueva Ecija, in the Philippines under Spanish rule. It followed shortly after the Cry of Pugad Lawin and was the first call for revolution in central Luzon. Roughly 3,000 volunteers were led by Mariano Llanera and Pantaleon Valmonte (the Gobernadorcillos of Cabiao and Gapan, respectively). They marched towards San Isidro, the provincial capital, where after fighting several battles with the Spanish forces, their army was finally forced to retreat and to undertake guerrilla warfare.
==Tyranny of Spain==
In response to Spanish oppression, the formation of the Katipunan, the Cry of Pugad Lawin, of August 1896, and the repression that followed, Mariano Llanera led about 700 men from Cabiao, while Pantaleon Valmonte led troops from Gapan. Manuel Tinio, Colonel Alipio Tecson, and their men also joined the combined forces of Llanera and Valmonte. With the people of the neighboring towns of Arayat, Deliquente (San Antonio), and Jaen, this force numbered three thousand Filipino revolutionaries, and it prepared to seize the provincial capital of San Isidro. Although the force numbered 3,000, it was only possessed of about 100 rifles. So, the Filipinos organized themselves at Sitio Pulu, about 5 kilometers from San Isidro, and chose 500 men for the initial attack, and chose to employ the Cabiao Brass Band to disguise the military movement as a peaceful march meant to gain the release of those already arrested by the Spanish.
Upon reaching San Isidro, the revolutionaries furiously fought the Spaniards, who defended themselves in the Casa Tribunal and the Arsenal, as well as in other government buildings, and in the houses of Spanish residents. The Spanish commander, Joaquin Machorro, commander of the Guardia Civil, was killed on the first day of battle. At the end of three days of fighting, the Spanish were driven out, and the revolutionaries seemed to have prevailed.〔"History of "Unang Sigaw ng Nueve Ecija". Ginto ang Inaani.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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