The autobiography of jose rizal
Home / General Biography Information / The autobiography of jose rizal
Age 14.—Became a boarder in the Ateneo.
1876, March 23. Age 16.—Matriculated in medical course. 26.—Formally condemned to death by Spanish court martial.
Pi y Margall, who had been president of the Spanish Republic, pleaded with the Prime Minister for Rizal’s life, but the Queen Regent could not forgive his having referred in one of his writings to the murder by, and suicide of, her relative, Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria.
Arranged a water system and had the plaza lighted. Address not made public but added to the charges against him.
Dec.
I had some slight notions of the morning sun and of my parents. That is as much as I can recall of my baby days.’
Synopsis
José Rizal, a Filipino intellectual, nationalist, and a famous champion for change in the Philippines during the Spanish colonialism era, is regarded as a national hero in his country of birth, whose anniversary is today marked as a national holiday known as Rizal Day.
This book features Rizal’s life story, told in his own words, and will appeal to a whole new generation of readers.
Title Details
◆ Original 1918 text
◆ Autobiography
◆ 5 x 8 in
◆ Matte Cover
◆ White Paper
1848, June 28.—Rizal’s parents married in Kalamba, La Laguna: Francisco Rizal-Mercado y Alejandra (born in Biñan, April 18,1818) and Teodora Morales Alonso-Realonda y Quintos (born in Sta.
Cruz, Manila, Nov. 14, 1827).
1861, June 19.—Rizal born, their seventh child.
June 22.—Christened as José Protasio Rizal-Mercado y Alonso-Realonda.
1870, Age 9.—In school at Biñan under Master Justiniano Aquin Cruz.
1871, Age 10.—In Kalamba public school under Master Lucas Padua.
Each and every Mint Edition title gets a fresh, professionally typeset manuscript and a dazzling new cover, all while maintaining the integrity of the original book.
With thousands of titles in our collection, we aim to spotlight diverse public domain works to help them find modern audiences. It is the only profile among his known portraits.
[115]
Dec.
30.—Married in Fort Santiago death cell to Josephine Bracken, Irish, the adopted daughter of a blind American who came to Dapitan for treatment.
Age 35 years, 6 months, 11 days. Shot on the Luneta, Manila, at 7:30 a. That is as much as I can recall of my baby days."
Two decades after his untimely death, Rizal's Own Story of His Life--the autobiography of Jos Rizal--was published and made available to an English-speaking audience.
m., and buried in a secret grave in Paco Cemetery. [108]
Rizal at 26. Age 28.—In Paris, publishing Morga’s History. 4.—Returned to Madrid to confer with countrymen on the Philippine situation, then constantly growing worse. by his brother, Paciano Mercado.
June.—Absence noted at Sto.
Tomás University, which owned Kalamba estate.
Rizal's Own Story of His Life
"I was born on Wednesday, the nineteenth of June, 1861. 12.—Wrote poem “My Last Farewell” and concealed it in an alcohol cooking lamp, after appearing in a courtroom where the judges made no effort to check those who cried out for his death.
His complaint was ignored by the authorities. Age 21.—Secretly left Manila, with passport of a cousin, taking at Singapore a French mail steamer for Marseilles and entering Spain at Port Bou by railroad.