Cavite Mutiny Who Led The Cavite Mutiny?
Cavite Mutiny Who Led The Cavite Mutiny?
On January 20, 1872, the Cavite Mutiny, an uprising of military personnel at the
Spanish arsenal in Cavite, took place. This event subsequently led to the execution of
the Filipino priests Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos and Jacinto Zamora, otherwise known
as GOMBURZA.
Cavite Mutiny of 1872
The unsuccessful mutiny was participated in by around 200 soldiers and laborers of the
Engineering and Artillery Corps who rose up after their salaries were reduced upon the
order of Governor-General Rafael de Izquierdo by subjecting them to personal taxes,
from which they were previously exempt.
The taxes required them to pay a monetary sum as well as to perform forced labor or
what they called, "polo y servicio."
The uprising was used by the Spanish colonial government to implicate and sentence to
death by garrote Fathers Mariano Gómez, José Burgos and Jacinto Zamora on
February 17, 1872 in Bagumbayan, and several other Filipino leaders.
These executions, particularly those of the GOMBURZA, were to have a significant
effect on people because of the shadowy nature of the trials. Dr. Jose Rizal dedicated
his work, El Filibusterismo, to the executed priests. Many scholars believe that the
Cavite Mutiny of 1872 was the beginning of Filipino nationalism which eventually led to
the 1896 Philippine Revolution.
Cavite Mutiny, (January 20, 1872), brief uprising of 200 Filipino troops and workers at
the Cavite arsenal, which became the excuse for Spanish repression of the embryonic
Philippine nationalist movement. Ironically, the harsh reaction of the Spanish authorities
served ultimately to promote the nationalist cause.
The mutiny was quickly crushed, but the Spanish regime under the reactionary governor
Rafael de Izquierdo magnified the incident and used it as an excuse to clamp down on
those Filipinos who had been calling for governmental reform. A number of Filipino
intellectuals were seized and accused of complicity with the mutineers. After a brief trial,
three priests—José Burgos, Jacinto Zamora, and Mariano Gómez—were publicly
executed. The three subsequently became martyrs to the cause of Philippine
independence.