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In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzón and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi sent Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, to head up a contingent of 300 Hispanic and 600 allied Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, modern day UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}, despite his previous war against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by pressure from a more hostile vassal, Rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly declared war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal for an attack.]] The bewildered Hispanics and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

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In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzón and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi sent Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, to head up a contingent of 300 Hispanic and 600 allied Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, modern day UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}, despite his previous war against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by pressure from a more hostile vassal, Rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly declared war on ther their fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal for an attack.]] The bewildered Hispanics and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

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The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and small failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butchered products sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption military expansionism]] against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.

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The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and small failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butchered products sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption military expansionism]] against the Ming, the so-called ''Empresa de China'', with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, Toyotomy regency, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.




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* ''Carrión: Un canalla sin ventura'', also by Ángel Miranda, also showcases the battle.
* ''Playa Honda'' by Javier Máquina features the eponymous battle.



* Francisco Narla's historical novel ''Literature/Ronin2013'' is also set in the Spanish Manila.

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* The historical novel ''Los primeros de Filipinas'' by Juan Antonio Pérez-Foncea is set during the conquest.
* Francisco Narla's historical novel ''Literature/Ronin2013'' is also set in the Spanish Manila.Manila.
* Jesús Maeso de la Torre's ''La caja china'' is also set there.
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Although the kingdoms of Castile and Portugal had previously agreed to respect their respective spheres of global influence in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, they were now arguing about the property and monopoly of the Moluccas. In 1525, Elcano returned there in a second expedition under García Jofre de Loaísa, but they became accidentally scathered around South America and the Pacific. A part of the expedition linked with the survivors of the flotilla of Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón, who had been sent by his cousin UsefulNotes/HernanCortez from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México), but soon they learned their subsequent skirmishes with the Portuguese would be for nothing. Castile and Portugal had butted diplomatic heads again and ultimately ruled the damn islands fell on the Portuguese side of the map in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza.

to:

Although the kingdoms of Castile and Portugal had previously agreed to respect their respective spheres of global influence in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, they were now arguing about the property and monopoly of the Moluccas. In 1525, Elcano returned there in a second expedition under García Jofre de Loaísa, but they became accidentally scathered around South America and the Pacific. A part of the expedition linked with the survivors of the flotilla of Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón, who had been sent by his cousin UsefulNotes/HernanCortez from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México), but soon they learned their subsequent skirmishes with the Portuguese would be were for nothing. nothing: Castile and Portugal had butted diplomatic heads again and ultimately ruled the damn islands fell on the Portuguese side of the map in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza.



Limahong's attack caused many a revolt in the island, the first when a group of slaves tried to escape during the battle and many of them killed each other in a huge fracas. Moreover, Lakandula and Suleyman rose against the Spaniards, as they had already seen Legazpi's promises broken by the greedy Lavezaris, and when they heard about the power of Limahong, they quickly grabbed booty and hostages to [[TheElitesJumpShip congratulate him with]] in the seemingly likely case he defeated the Spaniards. When he had his hands free, though, Salcedo crushed the rebellion and signed new treaties with them. This would be far from the last rebellion in Spanish lands, as the administration of the indigenous vassals left admittedly a lot to desire.

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Limahong's attack caused many a revolt in the island, the first when a group of slaves tried to escape during the battle and many of them killed each other in a huge fracas. Moreover, Lakandula and Suleyman rose against the Spaniards, as they had already seen Legazpi's promises broken by the greedy Lavezaris, and when they heard about the power of Limahong, they quickly grabbed booty and hostages to [[TheElitesJumpShip congratulate him with]] in the seemingly likely case he defeated the Spaniards. When he had his hands free, though, Salcedo crushed the rebellion and signed new treaties with them. This would be far from the last rebellion in Spanish lands, as the administration of the indigenous vassals was hard to police from either Spain or America due to the sheer distance and left admittedly a lot to desire.



Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when the Manila galleon ''San Felipe'' was shipwrecked on Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country. This would result in the two Iberian nations butting heads when the Spanish wanted to build a post in China, El Piñal, to become pals with the Chinese against possible Toyotomi expansionism, which the Portuguese shut down for their commercial interests, with gunshots included.

The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multi-cultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese were all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; even worse, not only a revolt of them killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of ThenLetMeBeEvil, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispanic-Japanese-Filipino task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim up to 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were half of that number in the island to begin with.

to:

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when the Manila galleon ''San Felipe'' was shipwrecked on Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country. This would result in the two Iberian nations butting heads when the Spanish wanted to build a post in China, El Piñal, in order to become pals with the Chinese against possible Toyotomi expansionism, which the Portuguese shut down for due to their own commercial interests, with gunshots included.

The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multi-cultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese were all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; even worse, not only community, especially after a Chinese revolt of them killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were and not less after they had suspicions that they the Chinese were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of ThenLetMeBeEvil, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispanic-Japanese-Filipino task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim up to 30.000 30,000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were half of that number in the island to begin with.



In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally getting the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the the enemies of the Iberians in the Eighty Years’ War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards’ conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undertaken from 1610 to 1624, as well as multiple blockade attempts in Manila and an additional initiative to take the Portuguese Macau, but the Dutch fleets were weakened every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, which some believe was the result of a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.

to:

In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally getting the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the the enemies of the Iberians in the Eighty Years’ War, UsefulNotes/TheEightyYearsWar, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards’ Spaniards' conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undertaken from 1610 to 1624, as well as multiple blockade attempts in Manila and an additional initiative to take the Portuguese Macau, but the Dutch fleets were weakened defeated every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, though, which some believe was the result of a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.
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Although the kingdoms of Castile and Portugal had previously agreed to respect their respective spheres of global influence in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, they were now arguing about the property and monopoly of the Moluccas. In 1525, Elcano returned there in a second expedition under García Jofre de Loaísa, but they became scathered around South America, Mexico and the islands. A part of expedition linked with the survivors of the flotilla of Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón, who had been sent by his cousin UsefulNotes/HernanCortez from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México), but soon they learned their skirmishes with the Portuguese were for nothing. Castile and Portugal had butted diplomatic heads again and ultimately ruled the damn islands fell on the Portuguese side of the map in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza.

However, this was only the beginning of the story. In 1541, yet another Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from New Spain to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands and failed to find wind to return home, and after having an unwanted territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested too on a supposed violation because at least that way they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he [[DeathByDespair died of sorrow]], but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines their name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.

to:

Although the kingdoms of Castile and Portugal had previously agreed to respect their respective spheres of global influence in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, they were now arguing about the property and monopoly of the Moluccas. In 1525, Elcano returned there in a second expedition under García Jofre de Loaísa, but they became accidentally scathered around South America, Mexico America and the islands. Pacific. A part of the expedition linked with the survivors of the flotilla of Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón, who had been sent by his cousin UsefulNotes/HernanCortez from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México), but soon they learned their subsequent skirmishes with the Portuguese were would be for nothing. Castile and Portugal had butted diplomatic heads again and ultimately ruled the damn islands fell on the Portuguese side of the map in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza.

However, this was only the beginning of the story. In 1541, yet another Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from New Spain to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands and failed to find wind to return home, and after having an unwanted territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested too on a supposed violation because at least that way they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing recording that he [[DeathByDespair died of sorrow]], but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines their name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.



In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, 62 at the time, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer who had been part of the Loaísa expedition years ago. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire fall of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.

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In 1561, the now king Philip II UsefulNotes/PhilipII gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, 62 at the time, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer who had been part of the Loaísa expedition years ago. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire fall of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.
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The Philippines were first contacted by the Spaniards during Ferdinand Magellan's expedition in 1521. No conquering action was taken at that point, as the expedition was primarily one of exploration, whose goal was to reach the still faraway and [[UsefulNotes/ConquestOfPortugueseIndia recently established]] Portuguese Moluccas. Magellan did attempt to sign an alliance with the local Rajah of Cebu, Humabon, offering to fight in their place against their enemies in Mactan, but while Magellan was a great navigator, he sorely lacked military talent, and this got him killed in the subsequent mission, the amazingly ill-planned Battle of Mactan. After a traitorous ambush by Humabon, the expedition escaped and reached his goal under the command of another crewman, Juan Sebastián Elcano.

The kingdoms of Castile and Portugal, which had previously agreed to respect their respective spheres of global influence in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, argued about the lands discovered by Magellan and Elcano, and ultimately ruled they fell on the Portuguese side of the map in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza. However, this was only the beginning of the story.

In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands and failed to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least that way they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he [[DeathByDespair died of sorrow]], but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines their name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.

to:

The Philippines were first contacted by the Spaniards during Ferdinand Magellan's expedition in 1521. No conquering action was taken at that point, as the expedition was primarily one of exploration, whose goal was to reach the still faraway and recently established [[UsefulNotes/ConquestOfPortugueseIndia recently established]] Portuguese Moluccas.Moluccas]]. Magellan did attempt to sign an alliance with the local Rajah of Cebu, Humabon, offering to fight in their place against their enemies in Mactan, but while Magellan was a great navigator, he sorely lacked military talent, and this got him killed in the subsequent mission, the amazingly ill-planned Battle of Mactan. After a traitorous ambush by Humabon, the remnants of the expedition escaped and reached his goal in 1522 under the command of another crewman, Juan Sebastián Elcano.

The Although the kingdoms of Castile and Portugal, which Portugal had previously agreed to respect their respective spheres of global influence in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, argued they were now arguing about the lands discovered by Magellan property and Elcano, monopoly of the Moluccas. In 1525, Elcano returned there in a second expedition under García Jofre de Loaísa, but they became scathered around South America, Mexico and the islands. A part of expedition linked with the survivors of the flotilla of Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón, who had been sent by his cousin UsefulNotes/HernanCortez from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México), but soon they learned their skirmishes with the Portuguese were for nothing. Castile and Portugal had butted diplomatic heads again and ultimately ruled they the damn islands fell on the Portuguese side of the map in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza. Zaragoza.

However, this was only the beginning of the story.

story. In 1541, a yet another Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands and failed to find wind to return home, and after having a an unwanted territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested too on a supposed violation because at least that way they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he [[DeathByDespair died of sorrow]], but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines their name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.



In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, 62 at the time, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.

Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal. After checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, the Hispanics smartly allied with those tribes's enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal [[BloodOath blood pacts]] with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were approaching, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the savvy Hispanics routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded then the first cities, Villa del Santísimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to New Spain, the ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back"), so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. Elcano himself had attempted and failed at this with one of his ships, as well as López de Villalobos, but this time Hurdaneta's navigation knowledge made the difference. The ships traveled north until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the long desired ''tornaviaje'', which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

to:

In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, 62 at the time, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. cosmographer who had been part of the Loaísa expedition years ago. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest fall of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.

Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal. After checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, the Hispanics smartly allied with those tribes's enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal [[BloodOath blood pacts]] with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were approaching, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 2,500 warriors against them. This time the savvy Hispanics routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded then the first cities, Villa del Santísimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to New Spain, the ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back"), so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta Urdaneta to find the right winds and tides. Elcano himself Most previous expeditions had attempted tried and failed at this with one of his ships, as well as López de Villalobos, it, but this time Hurdaneta's Urdaneta's navigation knowledge made the difference. The ships traveled north until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the long desired ''tornaviaje'', which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 2,100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.
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Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when the Manilla galleon ''San Felipe'' was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country. This would result in the two Iberian nations butting heads when the Spanish wanted to build a post in China, El Piñal, to become pals with the Chinese against possible Toyotomi expansionism, which the Portuguese shut down for their commercial interests, with gunshots included.

to:

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when the Manilla Manila galleon ''San Felipe'' was shipwrecked in on Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country. This would result in the two Iberian nations butting heads when the Spanish wanted to build a post in China, El Piñal, to become pals with the Chinese against possible Toyotomi expansionism, which the Portuguese shut down for their commercial interests, with gunshots included.



In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the the enemies of the Iberians in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undergone from 1610 to 1624, as well as multiple blockade attempts in Manila and an additional initiative to take the Portuguese Macau, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.

The Spanish Empire took its new turn in 1626 by sending an expedition to Formosa (now Taiwan) in order to counter Dutch settlements and plant their own, the city of Santísima Trinidad, so they could protect Spanish and Portuguese trade with the Chinese. Shortly after, they would get in trouble with the kingdom of Siam due to a mistaken adventuring operation for which a Spanish crew was arrested, leading to a retaliation attack by captain Juan de Alcarazo, which then provoked ''another'' clash with the Japanese because those were casually involved in both hits. In 1628, Spanish governor Juan Niño de Távora suspected Tokugawa and the Dutch were planning an invasion of the Philippines, but this never came to fruition.

The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege (the second in its history). Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing similarly to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be more or less the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief and mostly symbolic capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.

to:

In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get getting the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the the enemies of the Iberians in the Eighty Years Years’ War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the Spaniards’ conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undergone undertaken from 1610 to 1624, as well as multiple blockade attempts in Manila and an additional initiative to take the Portuguese Macau, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled weakened every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was the result of a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.

The Spanish Empire took its new turn in 1626 by sending an expedition to Formosa (now Taiwan) in order to counter Dutch settlements and plant their own, the city of Santísima Trinidad, so they could protect Spanish and Portuguese trade with the Chinese. Shortly after, they would get in trouble with the kingdom of Siam due to a mistaken adventuring operation trip for which a Spanish crew was arrested, leading to a retaliation retaliatory attack by captain Juan de Alcarazo, which then provoked ''another'' clash with the Japanese because those they were casually involved in both hits. In 1628, Spanish governor Juan Niño de Távora suspected Tokugawa and the Dutch were planning an invasion of the Philippines, but this never came to fruition.

The Portuguese would suffer two hits defeats around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege (the second in its history). Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing similarly to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish, which scored decisive sea victories in La Base Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be more or less the last turn round of the match, as the Eighty Years Years’ War ended the same year. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief and mostly symbolic capture by Britain during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.
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In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzón and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi sent Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, to head up a contingent of 300 Hispanic and 600 allied Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila (modern day UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}, despite his previously war against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by pressure from a more hostile vassal, Rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly declared war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal for an attack.]] The bewildered Hispanics and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

Making the most of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Pasig river and took positions there, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. The latter arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila, or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic populations, and became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indies and one of the greatest trade points on that side of the globe, their own counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and [[UsefulNotes/Macau Macau]]. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

to:

In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzón and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi sent Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, to head up a contingent of 300 Hispanic and 600 allied Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila (modern Maynila, modern day UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}, despite his previously previous war against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by pressure from a more hostile vassal, Rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly declared war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal for an attack.]] The bewildered Hispanics and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

Making the most of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Pasig river and took positions there, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. The latter arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila, or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic populations, and became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indies and one of the greatest trade points on that side of the globe, their own counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and [[UsefulNotes/Macau Macau]].UsefulNotes/{{Macau}}. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.
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Grammar


Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to New Spain, the ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back"), so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. Elcano himself had attempted and failed at this with one of his ships, as well as López de Villalobos, but this time Hurdaneta's navigation knowledge marked the difference. The ships ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the long desired ''tornaviaje'', which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted a blockade of the Spanish base, but it failed, and Legazpi countered diplomatically by sending another friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody in the Iberian Peninsula saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't [[{{Realpolitik}} violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).

to:

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to New Spain, the ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back"), so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. Elcano himself had attempted and failed at this with one of his ships, as well as López de Villalobos, but this time Hurdaneta's navigation knowledge marked made the difference. The ships ascended traveled north until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the long desired ''tornaviaje'', which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in on the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted a blockade of the Spanish base, but it failed, and Legazpi countered diplomatically by sending another friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody in the Iberian Peninsula saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't [[{{Realpolitik}} violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).



In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzón and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 allied Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila (modern day UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}), despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, Rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal with an attack.]] The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

Making the best of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Passig river and took positions here, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. The latter arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating the peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic population, became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indias and one of the greatest trade points in that side of the globe, their own counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and Macau. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when the [[KingOfThieves pirate lord]] Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, so Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with Filipino militiaman Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with the Spanish armada and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.

to:

In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzón and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send sent Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at to head up a contingent of 300 Hispanics Hispanic and 600 allied Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila (modern day UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}), UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}, despite he had his previously warred war against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of from a more hostile vassal, Rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called declared war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal with for an attack.]] The bewildered Spaniards Hispanics and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

Making the best most of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Passig Pasig river and took positions here, there, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. The latter arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating the peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila Maynila, or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic population, populations, and became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indias Indies and one of the greatest trade points in on that side of the globe, their own counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and Macau.[[UsefulNotes/Macau Macau]]. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest most notable occurence of the like came came in 1574, when the [[KingOfThieves pirate lord]] Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, so Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with Filipino militiaman Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was had been in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with the Spanish armada and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.



The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and small failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butcher sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption military expansionism]] against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.

to:

The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and small failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butcher butchered products sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption military expansionism]] against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.
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The Spanish conquest of the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific Ocean, a zone of the world that mostly belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by both the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in its trade.

to:

The Spanish conquest of the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific Ocean, a zone of the world that mostly belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by both the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition of UsefulNotes/FerdinandMagellan opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in its trade.
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In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, 62 at the time, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.

to:

In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, 62 at the time, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.
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The Spanish conquest of the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, a zone of the world that supposedly belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by both the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

Through the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the main MerchantCity in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of what could be best described as a new [[UsefulNotes/TheSilkRoad silk road]], which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.

to:

The Spanish conquest of the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, Pacific Ocean, a zone of the world that supposedly mostly belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by both the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

its trade.

Through the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the main MerchantCity in the Pacific Ocean, Pacific, as well as the western end of what could be best described as a new [[UsefulNotes/TheSilkRoad silk road]], which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, gathered, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.



The Philippines were first contacted by the Spaniards during Ferdinand Magellan's expedition in 1521. No conquering action was taken at that point, as the expedition was primarily one of exploration, whose goal was to reach the still faraway and [[UsefulNotes/ConquestOfPortugueseIndia recently established]] Portuguese Moluccas. Magellan did attempt to sign an alliance with the local Rajah of Cebu, Humabon, offering to fight in their place against their enemies in Mactan, but while Magellan was a great navigator, he sorely lacked military talent, and this got him killed in the subsequent battle, the amazingly ill-planned Battle of Mactan. After a traitorous ambush by Humabon, the expedition escaped and reached his goal under the command of another crewman, Juan Sebastián Elcano.

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The Philippines were first contacted by the Spaniards during Ferdinand Magellan's expedition in 1521. No conquering action was taken at that point, as the expedition was primarily one of exploration, whose goal was to reach the still faraway and [[UsefulNotes/ConquestOfPortugueseIndia recently established]] Portuguese Moluccas. Magellan did attempt to sign an alliance with the local Rajah of Cebu, Humabon, offering to fight in their place against their enemies in Mactan, but while Magellan was a great navigator, he sorely lacked military talent, and this got him killed in the subsequent battle, mission, the amazingly ill-planned Battle of Mactan. After a traitorous ambush by Humabon, the expedition escaped and reached his goal under the command of another crewman, Juan Sebastián Elcano.



In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands, unable to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least that way they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he [[DeathByDespair died of sorrow]], but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines their name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.

to:

In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands, unable islands and failed to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least that way they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he [[DeathByDespair died of sorrow]], but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines their name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.



In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.

Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal, and after checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, they smartly allied with those's local enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal [[BloodOath blood pacts]] with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were approaching, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the warned Spaniards routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded the first cities, Villa del Santísimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. Elcano himself had attempted and failed at this with one of his ships, but this time Hurdaneta's knowledge of navigation marked the difference. The ships ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

to:

In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, 62 at the time, assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.

Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal, and after goal. After checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, they the Hispanics smartly allied with those's local those tribes's enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal [[BloodOath blood pacts]] with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were approaching, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the warned Spaniards savvy Hispanics routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded then the first cities, Villa del Santísimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, New Spain, the ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back"), so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. Elcano himself had attempted and failed at this with one of his ships, as well as López de Villalobos, but this time Hurdaneta's knowledge of navigation knowledge marked the difference. The ships ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the long desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, ''tornaviaje'', which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.



In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzon and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal with an attack.]] The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

Making the best of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Passig river and took positions here, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. He arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating the peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic population, became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indias and one of the greatest trade points in that side of the globe, their own counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and Macau. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when the [[KingOfThieves pirate lord]] Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, and Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with Filipino militiaman Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with the Spanish armada and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.

Limahong's attack caused many a revolt in the island, the first when a group of slaves tried to escape during the battle and many of them killed each other in a huge fracas. Moreover, Lakandula and Suleyman rose against the Spaniards, as they had already seen Legazpi's promises broken by the greedy Lavezaris, and when they heard about the power of Limahong, they quickly grabbed booty and hostages to congratulate him in the seemingly likely case he defeated the Spaniards. When he had his hands free, Salcedo crushed the rebellion and signed new treaties with them. This would be far from the last rebellion in Spanish lands, as the administration of the indigenous vassals left admittedly a lot to desire.

to:

In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzon Luzón and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 allied Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, Maynila (modern day UsefulNotes/{{Manila}}), despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, rajah Rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal with an attack.]] The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagreeing about who started the fire.

Making the best of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Passig river and took positions here, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. He The latter arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating the peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic population, became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indias and one of the greatest trade points in that side of the globe, their own counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and Macau. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when the [[KingOfThieves pirate lord]] Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, and so Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with Filipino militiaman Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with the Spanish armada and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.

Limahong's attack caused many a revolt in the island, the first when a group of slaves tried to escape during the battle and many of them killed each other in a huge fracas. Moreover, Lakandula and Suleyman rose against the Spaniards, as they had already seen Legazpi's promises broken by the greedy Lavezaris, and when they heard about the power of Limahong, they quickly grabbed booty and hostages to [[TheElitesJumpShip congratulate him with]] in the seemingly likely case he defeated the Spaniards. When he had his hands free, though, Salcedo crushed the rebellion and signed new treaties with them. This would be far from the last rebellion in Spanish lands, as the administration of the indigenous vassals left admittedly a lot to desire.



Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when the Manilla galleon ''San Felipe'' was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country. This would result in the two Iberian nations butting heads when the Spanish wanted to build a post in China, El Piñal, to become pals with the Chinese against possible Toyotomi expansionism, which the Portuguese shut down for their commercial interests with gunshots included.

to:

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when the Manilla galleon ''San Felipe'' was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country. This would result in the two Iberian nations butting heads when the Spanish wanted to build a post in China, El Piñal, to become pals with the Chinese against possible Toyotomi expansionism, which the Portuguese shut down for their commercial interests interests, with gunshots included.



In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the the enemies of the Iberians in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undergone from 1610 to 1624, as well as an additional attempt to take the Portuguese Macau, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.

to:

In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the the enemies of the Iberians in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undergone from 1610 to 1624, as well as multiple blockade attempts in Manila and an additional attempt initiative to take the Portuguese Macau, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.



The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege (the second in its history). Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing similarly to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief if shocking capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.

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The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege (the second in its history). Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing similarly to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be more or less the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief if shocking and mostly symbolic capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.
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Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted a blockade of the Spanish base, but it failed, and the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending another friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody in the Iberian Peninsula saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't [[{{Realpolitik}}violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).

to:

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted a blockade of the Spanish base, but it failed, and the Spaniards Legazpi countered diplomatically by sending another friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody in the Iberian Peninsula saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't [[{{Realpolitik}}violate [[{{Realpolitik}} violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).



Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when a Manilla galleon, the ''San Felipe'', was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked at this and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country.

to:

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when a the Manilla galleon, the galleon ''San Felipe'', Felipe'' was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked at this and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits from the country.
country. This would result in the two Iberian nations butting heads when the Spanish wanted to build a post in China, El Piñal, to become pals with the Chinese against possible Toyotomi expansionism, which the Portuguese shut down for their commercial interests with gunshots included.



In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undergone from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.

to:

In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain the Iberians in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were undergone from 1610 to 1624, as well as an additional attempt to take the Portuguese Macau, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.



The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief if shocking capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.

to:

The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. siege (the second in its history). Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing similarly to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, Spanish, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief if shocking capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.
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By the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the main MerchantCity in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of what could be best described as a new [[UsefulNotes/TheSilkRoad silk road]], which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.

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By Through the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the main MerchantCity in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of what could be best described as a new [[UsefulNotes/TheSilkRoad silk road]], which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.



The Philippines were first contacted by the Spaniards during Ferdinand Magellan's expedition in 1521. No conquering action was taken at that point, as the expedition was primarily one of exploration, whose goal was to reach the still faraway Portuguese Moluccas. Magellan did attempt to sign an alliance with the local Rajah of Cebu, Humabon, offering to fight in their place against their enemies in Mactan, but while Magellan was a great navigator, he sorely lacked military talent, and this got him killed in the subsequent battle, the amazingly ill-planned Battle of Mactan. After a traitorous ambush by Humabon, the expedition escaped and reached his goal under the command of another crewman, Juan Sebastián Elcano.

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The Philippines were first contacted by the Spaniards during Ferdinand Magellan's expedition in 1521. No conquering action was taken at that point, as the expedition was primarily one of exploration, whose goal was to reach the still faraway and [[UsefulNotes/ConquestOfPortugueseIndia recently established]] Portuguese Moluccas. Magellan did attempt to sign an alliance with the local Rajah of Cebu, Humabon, offering to fight in their place against their enemies in Mactan, but while Magellan was a great navigator, he sorely lacked military talent, and this got him killed in the subsequent battle, the amazingly ill-planned Battle of Mactan. After a traitorous ambush by Humabon, the expedition escaped and reached his goal under the command of another crewman, Juan Sebastián Elcano.



Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal, and after checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, they smartly allied with those's local enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal [[BloodOath blood pacts]] with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were near, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the warned Spaniards routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded the first cities, Villa del Santísimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. The navigators ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending another friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese [[{{Realpolitik}} didn't violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).

to:

Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal, and after checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, they smartly allied with those's local enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal [[BloodOath blood pacts]] with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were near, approaching, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the warned Spaniards routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded the first cities, Villa del Santísimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. Elcano himself had attempted and failed at this with one of his ships, but this time Hurdaneta's knowledge of navigation marked the difference. The navigators ships ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful a blockade of the Spanish base, but it failed, and the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending another friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody in the Iberian Peninsula saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese [[{{Realpolitik}} didn't violate [[{{Realpolitik}}violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).
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The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multi-cultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese were all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; even worse, not only a revolt of them killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of SelfFulfillingProphecy, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispano-Sino-Filipino task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim up to 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were half of that number in the island to begin with.

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The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multi-cultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese were all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; even worse, not only a revolt of them killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of SelfFulfillingProphecy, ThenLetMeBeEvil, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispano-Sino-Filipino Hispanic-Japanese-Filipino task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim up to 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were half of that number in the island to begin with.
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The Spanish conquest of the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by both the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

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The Spanish conquest of the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, a zone of the world that supposedly belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by both the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.



Spanish hold onto the islands was tennuous and required constantly hard work, though, not only due to the Philippines being on the proverbial other side of the world, but also due to their closeness to clashes between eastern powers. Manila would be [[CityOfAdventure besieged in multiple occasions by people of all colors]] before the Spaniards had even conquered its very island, and a lack of reasons to engage heavily in anything other than commerce and defensive warfare meant said conquest would be very lengthy. The history of Spanish Philippines is also crossed by constant revolts and rebellions, caused often by greedy governors and not any less often by tribal and religious conflict, which extended to the Pacific theater the perennial clash between UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} and UsefulNotes/{{Islam}}.

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Spanish hold onto the islands was tennuous and required constantly hard work, though, not only due to the Philippines being on the proverbial other side of the world, but also due to their closeness to clashes between eastern powers. Manila would be [[CityOfAdventure besieged in multiple occasions by people of all colors]] before the Spaniards had even conquered its very island, and a lack of reasons to engage heavily in anything other than commerce commerce, exploitation and defensive warfare meant said conquest would be very lengthy. The history of Spanish Philippines is also crossed by constant revolts and rebellions, caused often by greedy governors and not any less often by tribal and religious conflict, which extended to the Pacific theater the perennial clash between UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} and UsefulNotes/{{Islam}}.
UsefulNotes/{{Islam}} to a new Pacific theater.



In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, accompanied by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Tlaxcaltecs vassals with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found by Magellan could be avoided.

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In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, accompanied assisted by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Christianized Tlaxcaltecs vassals with a desire for even more venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found (and provoked) by Magellan could be avoided.



Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending a friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese [[{{Realpolitik}} didn't violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).

to:

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending a another friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese [[{{Realpolitik}} didn't violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them]]).



In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzon and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal with an attack.]] The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagrees about who started the fire.

Making the best of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Passig river and took positions here, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. He arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating the peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic population, became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indias and one of the greatest trade points in the area, their counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and Macau. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when the [[KingOfThieves pirate lord]] Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, and Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with militiamen leader Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with their own fleet and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.

Limahong's attack caused many a revolt in the island, the first when a group of slaves tried to escape during the battle and many of them killed each other in a huge fracas. Moreover, Lakandula and Suleyman rose against the Spaniards, as they had already seen Legazpi's promises broken by the greedy Lavezaris, and when they heard about the power of Limahong, they quickly grabbed booty and hostages to congratulate him in seemingly likely case he defeated the Spaniards. When he had his hands free, Salcedo crushed the rebellion and signed new treaties with them. This would be far from the last rebellion in Spanish lands, as the administration of the indigenous vassals left admittedly a lot to desire.

to:

In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzon and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal with an attack.]] The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagrees disagreeing about who started the fire.

Making the best of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Passig river and took positions here, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. He arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating the peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic population, became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indias and one of the greatest trade points in that side of the area, globe, their own counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and Macau. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when the [[KingOfThieves pirate lord]] Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, and Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with militiamen leader Filipino militiaman Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with their own fleet the Spanish armada and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.

Limahong's attack caused many a revolt in the island, the first when a group of slaves tried to escape during the battle and many of them killed each other in a huge fracas. Moreover, Lakandula and Suleyman rose against the Spaniards, as they had already seen Legazpi's promises broken by the greedy Lavezaris, and when they heard about the power of Limahong, they quickly grabbed booty and hostages to congratulate him in the seemingly likely case he defeated the Spaniards. When he had his hands free, Salcedo crushed the rebellion and signed new treaties with them. This would be far from the last rebellion in Spanish lands, as the administration of the indigenous vassals left admittedly a lot to desire.



The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butcher sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption military expansionism]] against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.

to:

The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and small failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butcher sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption military expansionism]] against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.



Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when a Manilla galleon, the ''San Felipe'', was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits and all the rest from the country.

The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multicultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese were all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; even worse, not only a revolt of them killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of SelfFulfillingProphecy, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispanic-Japanese task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim up to 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were half of that number in the island to begin with.

to:

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when a Manilla galleon, the ''San Felipe'', was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked at this and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits and all the rest from the country.

The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multicultural multi-cultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese were all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; even worse, not only a revolt of them killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of SelfFulfillingProphecy, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispanic-Japanese Hispano-Sino-Filipino task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim up to 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were half of that number in the island to begin with.



In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain had to self-destroyed his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were performed from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed in revenge for their lack of success.

to:

In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident, in which a Portuguese captain had to self-destroyed blew up his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were performed undergone from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed by the Dutch in revenge for their lack of success.
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The Spanish conquest of the Philippines in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

By the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the nerve center of commerce in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of what could be best described as a new silk road, which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.

Spanish hold onto the islands was tennuous and required constantly hard work, though, not only due to the Philippines being on the proverbial other side of the world, but also due to their closeness to clashes between eastern powers. Manila would be besieged in multiple occasions by people of all colors before Spaniards had even conquered its very island, and a lack of reasons to engage heavily in anything other than commerce and defensive warfare meant said conquest would be very lengthy. The history of Spanish Philippines is also crossed by constant revolts and rebellions, caused often by greedy governors and not any less often by tribal and religious conflict, which extended to the Pacific theater the perennial clash between Christianity and Islam.

to:

The Spanish conquest of the Philippines UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by both the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

By the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the nerve center of commerce main MerchantCity in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of what could be best described as a new [[UsefulNotes/TheSilkRoad silk road, road]], which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.

Spanish hold onto the islands was tennuous and required constantly hard work, though, not only due to the Philippines being on the proverbial other side of the world, but also due to their closeness to clashes between eastern powers. Manila would be [[CityOfAdventure besieged in multiple occasions by people of all colors colors]] before the Spaniards had even conquered its very island, and a lack of reasons to engage heavily in anything other than commerce and defensive warfare meant said conquest would be very lengthy. The history of Spanish Philippines is also crossed by constant revolts and rebellions, caused often by greedy governors and not any less often by tribal and religious conflict, which extended to the Pacific theater the perennial clash between Christianity UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} and Islam.
UsefulNotes/{{Islam}}.



In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands, unable to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he died of sorrow, but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines its name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.

to:

In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands, unable to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least that way they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he [[DeathByDespair died of sorrow, sorrow]], but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines its their name, as a homage to the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.



Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal, and after checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, they smartly allied with those's local enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal blood pacts with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were near, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the warned Spaniards routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded the first cities, Villa del Santisimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. The navigators ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending a friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't violated the treaties themselves whenever it suited them).

to:

Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal, and after checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, they smartly allied with those's local enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal [[BloodOath blood pacts pacts]] with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were near, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the warned Spaniards routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded the first cities, Villa del Santisimo Santísimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. The navigators ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1565 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted at the news and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women more from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending a friar and scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese [[{{Realpolitik}} didn't violated violate the treaties themselves whenever it suited them).
them]]).



In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzon and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because he had mistaken a cannon signal by an attack. The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagrees about who started the fire.

to:

In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzon and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because [[PoorCommunicationKills he had mistaken a cannon signal by with an attack. attack.]] The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagrees about who started the fire.



Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when pirate lord Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, and Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with militiamen leader Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with their own fleet and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.

to:

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when the [[KingOfThieves pirate lord lord]] Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, and Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with militiamen leader Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with their own fleet and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.



The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butcher sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for military expansionism against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.

In 1578, Christianity and Islam clashed when evangelizing negotiations failed between governor Francisco de Sande and the Sultan of Brunei, Saiful Rijal. De Sande invaded with a fleet of 400 Hispanics, 1500 Filipinos and 300 allied Borneans, among them a candidate to new Sultan, Pengiran Seri Lela, but although they managed to take the capital of Brunei by assault, a cholera outbreak ravaged their army and forced them to abandon the city. Despite the failure, they curbed the Sultanate's expansion and achieved some freedom of hands to fight other Muslim tribes, as well as the increasing presence of Japanese pirates, whom an aging Salcedo routed in the 1582 UsefulNotes/CagayanBattles. A decade later, there was another attempt by adventurers Blas Ruiz and Diogo Veloso of instating an allied king, this time in Cambodia, for which they even had the help of Japanese mercenaries, but it failed again.

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their much less subtle methods. Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when a Manilla galleon, the ''San Felipe'', was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits and all the rest from the country.

The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multicultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese became all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; not only a revolt of them had killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of SelfFulfillingProphecy, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispanic-Japanese task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were even so many Chinese in the island to begin with.

to:

The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butcher sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption military expansionism expansionism]] against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.

In 1578, Christianity and Islam clashed when evangelizing negotiations failed between governor Francisco de Sande and the Sultan of Brunei, Saiful Rijal. De Sande invaded with a fleet of 400 Hispanics, 1500 Filipinos and 300 allied Borneans, among them a candidate to new Sultan, Pengiran Seri Lela, but although they managed to take the capital of Brunei by assault, a [[ThePlague cholera outbreak outbreak]] ravaged their army and forced them to abandon the city. Despite the failure, they curbed the Sultanate's expansion and achieved some freedom of hands to fight other Muslim tribes, as well as the increasing presence of Japanese pirates, whom an aging Salcedo routed in the 1582 UsefulNotes/CagayanBattles. A decade later, there was another attempt by adventurers Blas Ruiz and Diogo Veloso of instating an allied king, this time in Cambodia, for which they even had the help of Japanese mercenaries, but it failed again.

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their [[ActivistFundamentalistAntics much less subtle methods. methods.]] Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when a Manilla galleon, the ''San Felipe'', was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits and all the rest from the country.

The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multicultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese became were all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; even worse, not only a revolt of them had killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of SelfFulfillingProphecy, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispanic-Japanese task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim up to 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were even so many Chinese half of that number in the island to begin with.



In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were performed from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed in revenge for their lack of success.

The Spanish Empire took its new turn in 1626 by sending an expedition to Formosa (now Taiwan) in order to counter Dutch settlements and plant their own, the city of Santísima Trinidad, so they could protect Spanish and Portuguese trade with the Chinese. Shortly after, they would get in trouble with the kingdom of Siam due to a mistaken adventuring operation for which a Spanish crew was arrested, leading to a retaliation attack by captain Juan de Alcarazo, which provoked another clash with the Japanese given that those were casually involved in both hits. In 1628, Spanish governor Juan Niño de Távora suspected Tokugawa and the Dutch were planning an invasion of the Philippines, but this never came to fruition.

The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year, in 1648. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief if shocking capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.

to:

In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident.incident, in which a Portuguese captain had to self-destroyed his ship. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were performed from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed in revenge for their lack of success.

The Spanish Empire took its new turn in 1626 by sending an expedition to Formosa (now Taiwan) in order to counter Dutch settlements and plant their own, the city of Santísima Trinidad, so they could protect Spanish and Portuguese trade with the Chinese. Shortly after, they would get in trouble with the kingdom of Siam due to a mistaken adventuring operation for which a Spanish crew was arrested, leading to a retaliation attack by captain Juan de Alcarazo, which then provoked another ''another'' clash with the Japanese given that because those were casually involved in both hits. In 1628, Spanish governor Juan Niño de Távora suspected Tokugawa and the Dutch were planning an invasion of the Philippines, but this never came to fruition.

The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year, in 1648.year. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule,[[note]]barring a brief if shocking capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.
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The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year, in 1648. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule, although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.

to:

The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year, in 1648. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule, rule,[[note]]barring a brief if shocking capture during the Seven Years' War, in the post-conquest period[[/note]] although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.
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The Spanish conquest of the Philippines in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by Basque conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were more or less duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

to:

The Spanish conquest of the Philippines in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by Basque conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were more or less accidentally duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.



In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands, unable to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he died of sorrow, but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines its name, as a homage to his prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.

to:

In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands, unable to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he died of sorrow, but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines its name, as a homage to his the then prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.



In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, accompanied by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Tlaxcaltecs vassals with a desire for even more lands after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found by Magellan could be avoided.

to:

In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, accompanied by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Tlaxcaltecs vassals with a desire for even more lands venture after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found by Magellan could be avoided.



Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending a friar and scientific, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't violated the treaties themselves whenever it suited them).

to:

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending a friar and scientific, scientist, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't violated the treaties themselves whenever it suited them).
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In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the UsefulNotes/EightyYearsWar, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were performed from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed in revenge for their lack of success.

to:

In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the UsefulNotes/EightyYearsWar, Eighty Years War, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were performed from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed in revenge for their lack of success.

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The Spanish conquest of the Philippines in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific theater, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by Basque conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were more or less duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

By the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the nerve center of commerce in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of the first truly intercontinental line of trade in history, which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.

Spanish hold onto the islands was tennuous and required constantly hard work, though, not only due to the Philippines being on the proverbial other side of the world, but also due to their closeness to clashes between eastern powers. Manila would be besieged in multiple occasions by people of all colors before Spaniards had even conquered its very islands, and a lack of reasons to engage heavily in anything other than commerce and defensive warfare meant said conquest would be very lengthy. The history of Spanish Philippines is also crossed by constant revolts and rebellions, caused often by greedy governors and not any less often by tribal and religious conflict, which extended to the Pacific theater the perennial clash between Christianity and Islam.

to:

[[quoteright:195:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/spanishmanila.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:195:Spanish Manila.]]
The Spanish conquest of the Philippines in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific theater, Pacific, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by Basque conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were more or less duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

By the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the nerve center of commerce in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of the first truly intercontinental line of trade in history, what could be best described as a new silk road, which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.

Spanish hold onto the islands was tennuous and required constantly hard work, though, not only due to the Philippines being on the proverbial other side of the world, but also due to their closeness to clashes between eastern powers. Manila would be besieged in multiple occasions by people of all colors before Spaniards had even conquered its very islands, island, and a lack of reasons to engage heavily in anything other than commerce and defensive warfare meant said conquest would be very lengthy. The history of Spanish Philippines is also crossed by constant revolts and rebellions, caused often by greedy governors and not any less often by tribal and religious conflict, which extended to the Pacific theater the perennial clash between Christianity and Islam.



Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. The navigators ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1561 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

to:

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. The navigators ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1561 1565 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.



The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year, in 1648. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule, although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.

to:

The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year, in 1648. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule, although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.States.

!!In fiction:

[[AC:ComicBooks]]
* The Spanish 2016 comic book ''Espadas del fin del mundo'' by Ángel Miranda and Juan Aguilera is set in this frame.

[[AC:{{Film}}]]
* The documentary ''Film/SpainTheFirstGlobalization'' mentions the conquest and its subsequent trade among its many points about Spanish history.

[[AC:{{Literature}}]]
* Francisco Narla's historical novel ''Literature/Ronin2013'' is also set in the Spanish Manila.
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Added DiffLines:

The Spanish conquest of the Philippines in the 16th century was the main conquering incursion of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific theater, a zone of the world that belonged to their Portuguese homologues and whose control was disputed by the pen and the cannon. When the groundbreaking Magellan expedition opened Spanish America to the rich spice trade routes of the east, the Spaniards grew the desire to hold onto some land they could use to agilize trading operations, and this concluded in the settlement of a province in the Philippine islands by Basque conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, which the Portuguese were more or less duped into allowing until they found themselves involved in it.

By the combination of its strategic position and the navigation brilliance of the Iberians, the Spanish Philippines soon became the nerve center of commerce in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the western end of the first truly intercontinental line of trade in history, which traversed from Philippines to México and from México to Spain and vice versa. The bustling port city of Manila formed a melting pot of cultures where Spaniards, Portuguese, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese and many others met, sometimes to secure lucrative deals over silk and silver and sometimes to fight and plunder. It has been called the beginning of globalization, the point where the three biggest empires of the time (Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese Ming) became connected.

Spanish hold onto the islands was tennuous and required constantly hard work, though, not only due to the Philippines being on the proverbial other side of the world, but also due to their closeness to clashes between eastern powers. Manila would be besieged in multiple occasions by people of all colors before Spaniards had even conquered its very islands, and a lack of reasons to engage heavily in anything other than commerce and defensive warfare meant said conquest would be very lengthy. The history of Spanish Philippines is also crossed by constant revolts and rebellions, caused often by greedy governors and not any less often by tribal and religious conflict, which extended to the Pacific theater the perennial clash between Christianity and Islam.

!!Background
The Philippines were first contacted by the Spaniards during Ferdinand Magellan's expedition in 1521. No conquering action was taken at that point, as the expedition was primarily one of exploration, whose goal was to reach the still faraway Portuguese Moluccas. Magellan did attempt to sign an alliance with the local Rajah of Cebu, Humabon, offering to fight in their place against their enemies in Mactan, but while Magellan was a great navigator, he sorely lacked military talent, and this got him killed in the subsequent battle, the amazingly ill-planned Battle of Mactan. After a traitorous ambush by Humabon, the expedition escaped and reached his goal under the command of another crewman, Juan Sebastián Elcano.

The kingdoms of Castile and Portugal, which had previously agreed to respect their respective spheres of global influence in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, argued about the lands discovered by Magellan and Elcano, and ultimately ruled they fell on the Portuguese side of the map in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza. However, this was only the beginning of the story.

In 1541, a Spanish fleet headed by Ruy López de Villalobos sailed off from the Viceroyalty of New Spain (modern day México) to search for new routes through the Pacific. The expedition was a disaster, as they ran short of supplies between the newly discovered islands, unable to find wind to return home, and after having a territorial dispute with the Portuguese, they let themselves be arrested on a supposed violation because at least they would get fed. López died in prison in the Moluccas, with its captors writing that he died of sorrow, but he had already achieved the honor to give the Philippines its name, as a homage to his prince Philip, who didn't forget about it.

!!Magellan's legacy
In 1561, the now king Philip II gave orders to New Spain to send another expedition to the Philippines. Its leader would be a veteran administrator, Miguel López de Legazpi, accompanied by his cousin Friar Andrés de Urdaneta, an experienced navigator and cosmographer. At the head of five ships with 350 men, most of them Tlaxcaltecs vassals with a desire for even more lands after the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Conquest of the Mexica Empire]], they sailed off to the Philippines in 1564, carrying royal orders of expanding the Spanish Empire across the new islands and being as just and pragmatical as possible in their assimilation to Christian rule, so obstacles like those found by Magellan could be avoided.

Legazpi and his fleet passed by the Mariana Islands and reached their goal, and after checking out the hostility of some of the Philippine tribes, they smartly allied with those's local enemies per the Spanish conquering custom, in this case with Legazpi making tribal blood pacts with chieftains like Sikatuna and Sigala. As winter and hunger were near, the expedition approached the now infamous Rajanate of Cebu and offered their alliance in order to get supplies, but the Rajah Tupas, son of Humabon, advanced with 2500 warriors against them. This time the warned Spaniards routed the Cebuans by good ol' cannonfire, forcing Tupas to sue for peace and make another blood pact with Legazpi. The Spaniards founded the first cities, Villa del Santisimo Nombre de Jesús and Villa de San Miguel (modern day Ciudad de Cebú).

Legazpi then felt it was the moment to search again for a route back to México, so he sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo along with Hurdaneta to find the right winds and tides. The navigators ascended until catching the Kuroshio Current, and from there they sailed to California, finally completing in 1561 the desired ''tornaviaje'' ("travel back") to New Spain, which would soon become the world's main sea trade axis. King Philip II was delighted and decided to keep the lands, appointing Legazpi as their governor and sending back 2100 men and women from Hispanic territories to settle down in the new province.

Of course, there was still the little detail that the Philippines were technically in the Portuguese side of the world. The Portuguese protested, to the point of sending in 1568 a fleet under Gonzalo de Pereira that attempted an unsuccessful blockade of the Spanish base, but the Spaniards countered diplomatically by sending a friar and scientific, Martín de Rada, to explain through cutting-edge Copernican science that the islands actually fell on the Spanish side of the anti-meridian. Later research proved that this was not quite accurate, but by then the Spanish province was well established and nobody saw it worthy to start a war about it (especially because it's not like the Portuguese didn't violated the treaties themselves whenever it suited them).

!!Manila
In 1570, having heard of the rich resources of Luzon and its strategic position to trade with China, Legazpi send Martín de Goiti and another of his gransons, Juan de Salcedo, at head of 300 Hispanics and 600 Visayan warriors. They befriended Matanda, the Muslim rajah of Maynila, despite he had previously warred against Elcano, but negotiations to build a Spanish base were foiled by the pressure of a more hostile vassal, rajah Sulayman. Goyti and Salcedo decided to depart, but Suleyman suddenly called war on ther fleet, apparently because he had mistaken a cannon signal by an attack. The bewildered Spaniards and Visayans prevailed, but they abandoned Maynila anyways just in case, and the city burned down, with historians disagrees about who started the fire.

Making the best of the situation, Goiti and Salcedo moved to the Passig river and took positions here, fighting a long guerrilla war against the Maynila forces while waiting for Legazpi to reach them. He arrived in June 1571, and after negotiating the peace with the rajahs and their neighboring chieftain Lakandula, they all became vassals to Spain. Maynila or Manila, turned into a double city of indigenous and Hispanic population, became the capital of the Spanish Empire in the East Indias and one of the greatest trade points in the area, their counterpart to the Portuguese cities of Malacca and Macau. Ironically, its baptism of fire happened right after, when the rebellious Kampanpangan lord Tariq Suleyman (not to confuse with the previous, although they might have been allies) led an assault by the river and had to be expelled in a naval battle in Bangkusay.

Manila's commercial routes, which extended to China and Japan, were an obvious attraction to pirates from all the Pacific, but the craziest occurence of the like came in 1574, when pirate lord Limahong brought a fleet of around 4000 Chinese and Japanese pirates to try to capture the entire city. Goiti was killed in his own house, and Juan de Salcedo had to take arms as the city's general along with militiamen leader Galo and governor Guido de Lavezaris, who was in charge since Legazpi's death. Hispanics and natives fought a tough battle until repelling the pirate fleet, which Salcedo pursued with their own fleet and pinned in the river Agno. A Ming Chinese fleet arrived to arrest Limahong on the Wanli Emperor's orders, but the pirate ultimately managed to escape. Reality sometimes writes better scripts than Hollywood.

Limahong's attack caused many a revolt in the island, the first when a group of slaves tried to escape during the battle and many of them killed each other in a huge fracas. Moreover, Lakandula and Suleyman rose against the Spaniards, as they had already seen Legazpi's promises broken by the greedy Lavezaris, and when they heard about the power of Limahong, they quickly grabbed booty and hostages to congratulate him in seemingly likely case he defeated the Spaniards. When he had his hands free, Salcedo crushed the rebellion and signed new treaties with them. This would be far from the last rebellion in Spanish lands, as the administration of the indigenous vassals left admittedly a lot to desire.

!!When cultures clash
The conquest of the Philippines would continue for the next decades as a series of expansion movements, indigenous revolts and failed conquering projects. Spanish relations with China would only grow, as the Chinese were all over the silver, sugar and butcher sold by the Spaniards, while the Europeans enjoyed the porcelain, silk and ivory brought by the Chinese. Even so, there would be some voices in Spain calling for military expansionism against the Ming, with Jesuit Alonso Sánchez later proposing a particularly insane plan for the Spanish and Portuguese to invade China with the support of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which luckily for everybody involved didn't pan out. Peace, or some measure of it, was much more profitable.

In 1578, Christianity and Islam clashed when evangelizing negotiations failed between governor Francisco de Sande and the Sultan of Brunei, Saiful Rijal. De Sande invaded with a fleet of 400 Hispanics, 1500 Filipinos and 300 allied Borneans, among them a candidate to new Sultan, Pengiran Seri Lela, but although they managed to take the capital of Brunei by assault, a cholera outbreak ravaged their army and forced them to abandon the city. Despite the failure, they curbed the Sultanate's expansion and achieved some freedom of hands to fight other Muslim tribes, as well as the increasing presence of Japanese pirates, whom an aging Salcedo routed in the 1582 UsefulNotes/CagayanBattles. A decade later, there was another attempt by adventurers Blas Ruiz and Diogo Veloso of instating an allied king, this time in Cambodia, for which they even had the help of Japanese mercenaries, but it failed again.

Speaking of the Japanese, an unpleasant incident happened in 1597. Portuguese Jesuits had been preaching in Japan since the 1550s, but Spanish Franciscans had recently joined the party, causing political friction due to their much less subtle methods. Still, things had been fine up to this point, but when a Manilla galleon, the ''San Felipe'', was shipwrecked in Shikoku, one of its sailors decided to boast to the Japanese that Spain and Portugal were actually united at the time (they were, as the Iberian Union) and that missionary work was the start of a conquest. Naturally, UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi panicked and ordered all the Christians to be seized, crucifying 26 Franciscans and temporally expelling the Jesuits and all the rest from the country.

The early 1600s featured a failed campaign to assimilate the gold-rich region of Igorot, followed by a huge conflict within Manila's multicultural environment. The resident Spaniards, Filipinos and Japanese became all wary of the massive and increasingly powerful Chinese community; not only a revolt of them had killed a Spanish governor, Gómez Pérez Dasmariñas, but now there were suspicions that they were secretly collaborating with a Ming plan to invade Manila. In a possible case of SelfFulfillingProphecy, many Chinese rose up and tried to capture Manila with siege towers and all, so a very motivated Hispanic-Japanese task force routed and massacred them. Traditional sources claim 30.000 Chinese butchered, although it's highly unlikely there were even so many Chinese in the island to begin with.

!!The last battles
In 1610, the Spaniards were close to accidentally get the Portuguese expelled from Japan (again) when another shipwrecked galleon, the ''San Francisco'', convinced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu that the Spanish could replace their Iberian neighbors, causing the spectacular ''Nossa Senhora da Graça'' incident. This was overshadowed, however, by the arrival of the enemies of Spain in the UsefulNotes/EightyYearsWar, the Dutch, who attempted to dispute the Spaniards the conquest of Philippines. Three Flemish attempts to capture the province through the land of Playa Honda (modern day Botolan) were performed from 1610 to 1624, but the Dutch fleets were rumpled every time despite their size advantage. Tokugawa then declared the Spaniards unwelcome in Japan, in which some believe was a slandering campaign performed in revenge for their lack of success.

The Spanish Empire took its new turn in 1626 by sending an expedition to Formosa (now Taiwan) in order to counter Dutch settlements and plant their own, the city of Santísima Trinidad, so they could protect Spanish and Portuguese trade with the Chinese. Shortly after, they would get in trouble with the kingdom of Siam due to a mistaken adventuring operation for which a Spanish crew was arrested, leading to a retaliation attack by captain Juan de Alcarazo, which provoked another clash with the Japanese given that those were casually involved in both hits. In 1628, Spanish governor Juan Niño de Távora suspected Tokugawa and the Dutch were planning an invasion of the Philippines, but this never came to fruition.

The Portuguese would suffer two hits around 1638, as they were also declared unwelcome in Japan due to their participation in the Christian [[UsefulNotes/AmakusaShiro Shimabara Rebellion]], and then lost their star colony of Malacca to a Dutch siege. Reinvigorated, the Dutch and their own native allies did the same in the Spanish Formosa, managing to expel the Castilians in the second attempt in 1642. Their final advance on Manila, however, would be stopped again by the Spanish Empire, which scored decisive sea victories in La Naval de Manila and Puerto de Cavite, and this would be the last turn of the match, as the Eighty Years War ended the same year, in 1648. This would end the existential threats to Spanish rule, although as mentioned, occasional revolts would last until the end of their era and well into the Philippines' acquisition by the United States.

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