The Settlement in Panay
Legazpi was faced with many problems. One Was the bad feeling of some of his own met,
who refused to work. Others robbed the graves of the Filipinos, Legazpi acted justly and punished
all those who refused to cooperate with him. There was also a conspiracy among the Spanish
soldiers to seize the ship San Pablo. The captain of the boat informed the Master of Camp, Mater)
del Saz, about it and the conspirators were arrested. The leader of the conspiracy was
beheaded‘ but the rest were pardoned
Legazpi was also faced with the hostility of the Portuguese. The latter realized that the
Philippines lay on the Portuguese side of the demarcation line. The Portuguese captain, Gonzalo
de Pereira, harassed Legazpi by blockading Cebu in order to starve the Spaniards. With the help of
the Cebuanos, Legazpi succeeded in forcing Pereira to leave the Philippines. Faced with these
problems, Legazpi decided to move over to Panay. He heard that there was plenty of food there .
and so in 1569 he and some of his men sailed for Panay. On the banks of the Panay River, Legazpi
founded the second Spanish settlement in the Philippines. He won over the people of Panay by
telling them of his peaceihl intentions. The Spanish missionaries, the Augustinian friars, converted
some natives to Christianity. The friendliness of the Filipinos was shown when they brought food
to Legazpi. Thus were the Spaniards saved from st.


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Sagot :

Answer:

The history of the Philippines from 1565 to 1898, also known as the Spanish Philippines or the Spanish colonial period, was the period during which the Philippines were ruled as the Captaincy General of the Philippines within the Spanish East Indies, initially under New Spain until Mexican independence in 1821, resulting in direct Spanish control during a period of governmental instability there.

Forty-four years after Ferdinand Magellan discovered the Philippines and died in the Battle of Mactan during his Spanish expedition to circumnavigate the globe, the Spaniards successfully annexed and colonized the islands during the reign of Philip II of Spain, whose name remained attached to the country.

The Spanish colonial period ended with the Philippine Revolution in 1898, which marked the beginning of the American colonial era of Philippine history.