Filipino nationalism

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Filipino_nationalism an entity of type: Thing

El nacionalismo filipino es un recrudecimieno de los sentimientos patrióticos y de los ideales nacionalistas en Filipinas de finales de 1800 que llegó como resultado del Movimiento propagandístico de 1872 a 1892. Se convirtió en la principal ideología de la primera revolución asiática nacionalista, la Revolución Filipina de 1896. rdf:langString
Filipino nationalism refers to the establishment and support of a political identity associated with the modern nation-state of the Philippines, leading to a wide-ranging campaign for political, social, and economic freedom in the Philippines. This gradually emerged from various political and armed movements throughout most of the Spanish East Indies—but which has long been fragmented and inconsistent with contemporary definitions of such nationalism—as a consequence of more than three centuries of Spanish rule. These movements are characterized by the upsurge of anti-colonialist sentiments and ideals which peaked in the late 19th century led mostly by the ilustrado or landed, educated elites, whether peninsulares, insulares, or native (Indio). This served as the backbone of the first nati rdf:langString
rdf:langString Filipino nationalism
rdf:langString Nacionalismo filipino
xsd:integer 2616851
xsd:integer 1117571664
rdf:langString November 2021
rdf:langString paragraph places excessive weight on the Enrile ambush as a rationalization for the declaration, which is historically attributed to numerous other reasons.
rdf:langString El nacionalismo filipino es un recrudecimieno de los sentimientos patrióticos y de los ideales nacionalistas en Filipinas de finales de 1800 que llegó como resultado del Movimiento propagandístico de 1872 a 1892. Se convirtió en la principal ideología de la primera revolución asiática nacionalista, la Revolución Filipina de 1896.
rdf:langString Filipino nationalism refers to the establishment and support of a political identity associated with the modern nation-state of the Philippines, leading to a wide-ranging campaign for political, social, and economic freedom in the Philippines. This gradually emerged from various political and armed movements throughout most of the Spanish East Indies—but which has long been fragmented and inconsistent with contemporary definitions of such nationalism—as a consequence of more than three centuries of Spanish rule. These movements are characterized by the upsurge of anti-colonialist sentiments and ideals which peaked in the late 19th century led mostly by the ilustrado or landed, educated elites, whether peninsulares, insulares, or native (Indio). This served as the backbone of the first nationalist revolution in Asia, the Philippine Revolution of 1896. The modern concept would later be fully actualized upon the inception of a Philippine state with its contemporary borders after being granted independence by the United States by the 1946 Treaty of Manila.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 81629

data from the linked data cloud