MLARTC_FM.part 1.qxp

(Chris Devlin) #1
his people. Although its authenticity is questionable, the eighteen com-
mandments of the Kalantiyaw code may be one of the few written records
surviving from pre-Spanish times.
Western history of the Philippines begins with Captain Ferdinand
Magellan landing on the island of Cebu in the central Visayas on April 15,


  1. The conquistador was circumnavigating the globe and claiming
    lands for the Spanish Crown. The name Philippinescomes from the Span-
    ish version of “Philip’s Pines,” the name Magellan gave the islands as he
    claimed them for King Philip II. In the Battle of Mactan, near Cebu, Cap-
    tain Magellan was killed while retreating in the surf from an attack by na-
    tive forces led by Datu Lapu-Lapu. The Spanish colonial period brought
    Catholic religion to the Philippine islands and helped to unify them into a
    single nation. Independence from Spain was declared on June 12, 1898.
    The Filipino revolution for independence was led by secret societies, such
    as the Katipunan. Most Katipunan members were Freemasons following
    pre-Spanish traditions and were known to practice both Filipino Martial
    Arts and Spanish swordsmanship. After the Spanish-American War, the
    United States got Puerto Rico and the Philippines as booty.
    The U.S. forces fought a guerilla war against the Moros in Mindanao
    to claim the islands. Fierce resistance from local Muslim tribes caused the
    United States military to recall the .38 caliber revolver and issue .45 caliber
    revolvers to increase stopping power. Moros tied tourniquets on their limbs
    to prevent blood loss and charged into the American trenches. The nick-
    name “leatherneck” refers to the United States Marines’ wearing leather
    gorgets around their necks to stop the Moros from cutting their throats.
    Japanese imperial armed forces invaded the Philippines and occupied
    the islands from 1942 to 1945. An ideological battle was fought for the
    soul of the Filipino people, who were reminded by the Japanese that despite
    their history under Spain and America, they were oriental, not occidental.
    The Japanese encountered fierce guerilla resistance in the islands from Fil-
    ipino nationalists and their American allies. Following General Douglas
    MacArthur’s historic return landing in Leyte, the Philippines headed for
    self-determination. There is an indelible mark on the Filipino psyche from
    the Japanese occupation during World War II. Some of the two-handed
    stickfighting styles, such as Dos Manosin Doce Pares Eskrima, were de-
    veloped to encounter Japanese swords. After the American commonwealth
    ended in 1946, the Philippines developed like other former Spanish
    colonies as an agricultural society.
    Nowadays, Filipino martial arts include many types of skills, but not
    all styles include the entire range of them. Inosanto classifies Filipino skills
    into twelve categories: (1) single stick, sword, or ax; (2) double stick,
    sword, or ax; (3) single stick, sword, or ax and dagger or shield; (4) dou-


426 Philippines

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