Montero y Vidal: Description of The Event
Montero y Vidal: Description of The Event
Montero y Vidal: Description of The Event
Description of He exaggerated his description of the event because he clearly relates it from the perspective of his race, the Spaniards.
the event He explained how native soldiers and laborers turned their mutiny into an uprising against Spanish power. He also
interpreted the event as the overthrow of a secular throne in Spain, as well as an unfettered press campaign against
monarchical ideas.
According to Vidal, the mutiny involves a plot to assassinate the Spanish officers. The friars, the servants, their lords, and
the Captain-General's escort at Malacanang And there is a signal among the Cavite and Manila conspirators. The shooting
of rockets and the fiesta in Sampaloc go hand in hand with the mutiny; at the fiesta, fireworks were displayed and rockets
were shot into the air, and that was misinterpreted as a signal of the plot.
Reasons for According to his narrative, the abolition of the advantages enjoyed by the Cavite arsenal was the reason for the
instigating the mutiny.
mutiny
Description of He states that the mutineers are native troops with a large number of civilians and that their main commanders are native
the mutineers priests and the curate of Cavite, who have an enthusiastic personality and vast riches, allowing the curate to wield great
power.
Response of the He made it clear in his narrative that throughout the revolt, he was attempting to demonstrate how quickly the colonial
colonial authorities responded to the situation and how the Spaniards wanted to minimize unnecessary bloodshed, which is not
government stated in other renditions of the incident. Although they do not wish to shed blood, they have sentenced those innocent
local priests to death in order to show the Filipinos what will happen if they defy the government.
He claims that the rebels who survived and were imprisoned identified the instigators of the rebellion, which included the
Implication of the GomBurZa, several other Filipino priests, lawyers, employees, and other Filipinos. The rebels were subsequently
GomBurZa sentenced to death by strangulation in front of the enormous crowd on the field of Bagumbayan, but the CaptainGeneral
fixed his cumplase on the sentence, and the GommBurZa, together with Saldua, were among the other rebels who were
sentenced to death by strangulation.