Antonio de Morga

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Antonio de Morga's Sucesos de las Islas

Antonio de Morga Sánchez Garay (29 November 1559 – 21 July 1636) was a Spanish soldier, lawyer
and a high-ranking colonial official for 43 years, in the Philippines (1594 to 1604), New Spain and Peru,
where he was president of the Real Audiencia for 20 years.

He was also a historian. After being reassigned to Mexico, he published the book Sucesos de las islas
Filipinas in 1609, considered one of the most important works on the early history of the Spanish
colonization of the Philippines.[1] As Deputy Governor in the Philippines, he restored the audencia. He
took over the function of judge or oidor. He also took command of Spanish ships in a 1600 naval battle
against Dutch corsairs, but suffered defeat and barely survived.

His history was first published in English in 1868; numerous editions have been published in English,
including a 1907 edition that is online at the Gutenberg Project[2]. It has also been reprinted in
Spanish and other languages

The value of Antonio de Morga's Sucesos de las Islas has long been recognised. A first-hand account of
the early Spanish colonial venture into Asia, it was published in Mexico in 1609 and has since been re-
edited on a number of occasions. It attracted the attention of the Hakluyt Society in 1851, although
the edition prepared for the Society by H. E. J. Stanley was not published until 1868. Morga's work is
based on personal experiences, or on documentation from eye-witnesses of the events described.
Moreover, as he tells us himself, survivors from Legazpi's expedition were still alive while he was
preparing his book in Manila, and these too he could consult. As a lawyer, it is obvious that he would
hardly fail to seek such evidence. The Sucesos is the work of an honest observer, himself a major actor
in the drama of his time, a versatile bureaucrat, who knew the workings of the administration from
the inside.It is also the first history of the Spanish Philippines to be written by a layman, as opposed to
the religious chroniclers. Morga's book was praised, quoted, and plagiarized, by contemporaries or
successors. Filipinos have found it a useful account of the state of their native culture upon the coming
of the conquistadors; Spaniards have regarded it as a work to admire or condemn, according to their
views and the context of their times; some other Europeans, such as Stanley, found it full of lessons
and examples.

Annotation of Antonio Morga’s Sucesos de las Islas FilipinasThe Propaganda and the Tripartite
View of Philippine History
Words has been around about the lazy Indio. It was due to this trait that thecountry never hit
the road to progress. In fact, this was always the repeated theme ofSpanish slurs against the
Indio to which Rizal replied in his essay on the Indolence ofthe Filipinos written in La
Solidaridad in five installments. In his essay, he turned thetable against the colonizers
themselves for having caused this trait as evidenced by theFilipinos’ thriving manifold
industries before the coming of Spanish colonialism. Issueslike this influenced Rizal to take
the task of rectifying errors, in the manner history of thePhilippines has been presented.After
Noli Me Tangere’s publication, the denigration levelled against the Filipinosentered another
phase that complemented the first, attacks about Filipino ingratitude.This charge was more,
viciously unkind than the accusation of indolence but one whichRizal found himself itching to
pound on in order to prove its utter falsity.There has to be a way to demonstrate such
peroration of the defenders of theempire wrong. If he intends to refute such claim of
indolence and ingratitude, uncivilizedand barbaric Indios, he must think of a solid scholarship
in Philippine history alreadypublished, not the ones written by the friars whose works were
mostly compilations andtales of miracles that characterized their evangelization of
the country rather thanobjective notes observed outside the prism of their
theological lenses. His friendBlumentritt informed him of the existence of a book
authored by De Morga entitledSucesos which can be a good source of knowledge, the book
can be found in thefamous British Museum in London. The book Sucesos de las Islas
Filipinas, waspublished in Mexico (Nueva España) in 1609 authored by Dr. Antonio Morga
Antonio De Morga became the Lieutenant-Governor of the Philippines in 1593, apowerful
man in the country next to the Governor-General. Five years later, he wouldvacate this post in
order to be appointed as a judge of the Royal Audiencia in Manila. In1603 he was moved to
Mexico then to Ecuador in 1615 to become the latter’s chief ofits Royal Audiencia. His
impressive academics before he wound up in governmentservice made Rizal to be
more endearing to the Sucesos. Morga already graduated from the University of Salamanca at
the age of fifteen,and four years later would hold a title in Doctorate in Canon Law.
After a stint ofteaching in Seville, he returned to Salamanca in order to study Civil Law.One
particularly likable for Rizal was about Morga’s status of not being one oramong the friars in
describing the events he observed in the Philippine islands. Rizalsaid that Morga’s work
was more reliable compared to other accounts about thePhilippines. Morga
witnessed the events he described, and wrote them objectivelywithout
exaggerations although in quite a number of instances he erred in interpretingthem,
especially in some patterns of the Filipino culture, which he obviously interpretedaccording to
his Spanish prejudices. So there goes the need to make an annotation ofMorga’s work in
order for Rizal to correct what had been mistaken or to amplify where adearth of information
called for it.Lesson 1: Antonio Morga’s Sucesos de las Islas FilipinasConsidered as one of the
important literary work which pertains to the colonizationof Spain in the Philippines,
published by Antonio De Morga in Mexico in the year of1609. The work discussed the
political, social and economic situation between that ofthe colonizing foreign country(Spain),
and the colonized country(Philippines). Sucesos is simply the work of an honest observer, a
bureaucrat, who is exposed tothe workings of various administration from the inside.
Meanwhile, Las Islas Filipinasrefers to “The Philippine Island” in English and was named to
honor King Philip II ofSpain. The Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas is an eight (8) chapter book. The
first seven (7)chapters of the book mainly focused on the political events that transpired in
the colonyinvolving various Spanish administrations, from Miguel Lopez de Legaspi to Pedro
deAcuna. It was more of an account of political events and realities in the
country.However, chapter eight (8) is considered the most interesting part of the
book, itprovides a vivid description of the Pre-Hispanic Filipinos, or rather the Indios, at
theSpanish contact. This particular chapter of the book was essential for Rizal, he maximized
the useof this chapter to discuss the ethnographic value of the Pre-Hispanic Filipinos. This
lastchapter was of particular value to Rizal, as this would be material in his
effort toreconnect the 19th century Filipinos to their past.
Purpose of the Sucesos According to Dr. Morga (1609) the purpose for writing Sucesos is to
highlight "the deeds achieved by our Spaniards, the discovery, conquest, and
conversion of the Filipinas Islands - as well as various fortunes that they have from time to
time in the great kingdoms and among the pagan peoples surrounding the islands.”
The annotation of Morga’s work Rizal was not a professional historian, but he was a dedicated
student of history in general and of Philippine history in particular. Rizal’s love for his country
made him a historian. He made it a project to write for Filipinos about their history in order to
make them know about their country. He delved into history after seeing how some foreign
authors wrote about the Philippines. He saw how the Philippines was belittled and he himself
experienced how Filipinos were wrongly derided. Thus, he formed that personal desire to
make the Philippines known according to a proper perspective and historiography
was one solution. Historiography is the writing of history, especially based on the
critical examination of sources, the selection of particulars from authentic material and
the synthesis of particulars into a narrative. Rizal tried to do just that.

Significance of Rizal’s Annotation of MorgaThe annotation of Rizal has aimed well. It


is meant to raise the people’sconsciousness of their past that lay buried from their
memory. It is giving them theopportunity for the first time to see the grandeur and glory of
their race snatched awayat the point of colonial contact. Now that it is laid bare before them
the existence of athriving Filipino civilization, it is with high hope that upon reading his work,
his ownpeople and countrymen would feel a certain pride about themselves, their land,
andcountry.It is a piece of historical work written for the Filipinos about their history. No
onehas ever written the history of the Philippines from the perspective of the Filipinos
untilRizal pioneered it. All that was published before were done by Spaniards either
detailingtheir religious accomplishments in the Philippines, or they just simply reinforced
whatthey believed to be the superiority of their race at the expense of the backward
Indios.Among the notable importance of the annotation is that it is published to awakenthe
consciousness of the Filipino people about their past. Moreover, the annotation ispublished
by Rizal to encourage the next generation, to devote themselves to studyingthe future.Though
written with earnest scholarship, Rizal’s De Morga is heavily tinged withnationalism. Rizal’s
Morga, says Ambeth Ocampo, is significant because with thisedition, Rizal began the
task of writing the first Philippine history from the viewpoint of aFilipino. Rizal realized the
importance of the past as a tool to understand the presentand eventually confront the future.
For modern-day Filipinos, Rizal’s Morga should be more relevant in impellingthem to learn
the history of their country. No true citizen can ever have true concern forhis country without
going back to its history to know its struggles, failures and triumps inorder to contribute
something to its welfare. The country and its history are inseparablyconnected. In a world
that is more interconnected nowadays where nationalism is lessemphasized and where
globalization through technology and mass media is much morefashionable to the effect that
our nation’s identity is at stake of dissipating, learning thecountry’s history is a most
effective tool to preserve it. After all, Ambeth Ocampodeclares “ learning history
should not only be informative, it is meant to betransformative.”

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