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Abc’s
1.
2. Ateneo Municipal de
manila
When he was 11 years old, Rizal entered the Ateneo Municipal de
Manila. He earned excellent marks in subjects like philosophy,
physics, chemistry, and natural history.
3. Bone
After the execution, the name Rizal was not to be spoken. He was
referred to safely as El Difunto (the dead one). He had been
abandoned directly in the soil. A bone with a bullet wound was
enshrined urn and is now a secular relic at Fort Santiago.
4. Coat
The coats that Dr. Jose P. Rizal used was now a is now a secular
relic at Fort Santiago.
5. Dungeon
The dungeons used to be the storage vaults and
powder magazine of the Baluarte de Santa Barbara.
6. El filibusterismo
El Filibusterismo (Spanish for "The Filibustering"), also known
by its English alternate title The Reign of Greed, is the second
novel written by Philippine national hero José Rizal. It is the
sequel to Noli Me Tangere and like the first book, was written
in Spanish. It was first published in 1891 in Ghent, Belgium.
Throughout the Philippines, the novel is read in senior high
schools.
7. Fort santiago
José Rizal, the Philippines' national hero, was imprisoned here
before his execution in 1896.
8. hongkong
Hong Kong was clearly the right place to go for Dr. Jose Rizal,
at least for the time being, not only because it was near the
Philippines, but also because his dear friend Basa was there.
9. intramuros
Intramuros is the oldest district and
historic core of Manila, the capital of
the Philippines. Known as the Walled
City, the original fortified city of Manila
was the seat of the Spanish government
during the Spanish colonial period.
10. Josephine bracken
Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken was the common-law wife of Dr.
José Rizal during his exile in Dapitan . In the early morning hours of
December 30, 1896, the day of his execution by firing squad, the couple was
married in Fort Santiago, the place of his incarceration, following a
reconciliation with the Catholic Church. The marriage, though, is disputed
by some sectors because no records were found regarding the union,
discounting the unusual events of that day, even if it was attested by
Josephine herself and the officiating priest
11. kulungan
At the right wall of the Contemplation Room is the entrance to a model
of Jose Rizal’s detention cell at Fort Santiago with a representation of
Rizal sitting on a desk. The location marker reads: “In this cell Jose
Rizal was detained prisoner from 3 November to the morning of 29
December 1896 falsely charged with rebellion, sedition and formation
of illegal societies.”
12. Leonor rivera
Leonor Rivera Kipping was the childhood sweetheart, and “lover by
correspondence” of Dr. José Rizal. Rivera’s romantic relationship with Rizal
lasted for eight years. She was immortalized by Rizal as the character María
Clara in the Spanish-language novel Noli Me Tangere.
13. Mi ultimo adios
"Mi último adiós" (Spanish for "My
Last Farewell") is a poem written
by Philippine national hero Dr José
Rizal on the eve of his execution on 30
December 1896. This poem was one of
the last notes he wrote before his death;
another that he had written was found
in his shoe but because the text was
illegible, its contents remains a mystery.
14. Noli me tangere
Noli Me Tángere is a novel written by Dr. José Rizal during
the colonization of the country by Spain to expose the inequities
of the Spanish Catholic priests and the ruling government.
15. O’ sei san
O Sei San was a nickname given to Seiko Usui, a
native of Japan. She had an intimate relationship
with Jose Rizal during Rizal’s vacation on Yokohama.
She was 23 years old when she met Rizal. Her former
status as a daughter of samurai gave her an address’s
of "O Sei San" and "The Honorable Miss Sei".
16. Paco cemetery/park
PACO cemetery was built by the Dominican priests in 1820. It was where
Jose Rizal was buried by the Spaniards after his execution on the Luneta
(Rizal Park). The original grave was at the back of the Park. A plaque
marks the place, and it reads: “JOSE RIZAL – Executed 30 December, 1896,
interred secretly in this spot by the authorities on the same day. Remains
exhumed 17 August 1912, laid beneath the monument at the Luneta.”
17. quill
Dr. Jose P. Rizal used quill for all his
writings and novels.
18. Rizal
Dr. jose p. Rizal
Jose Protacio Rizal Mercado Y Alonso Realonda Quintos (June 19, 1861 –
December 30, 1896) was a Filipino nationalist and reformist. He is
considered one of the national heroes of the Philippines, together
with Andres Bonifacio.
19. Steps/ shoe prints
These were the some of the embedded shoe prints of Dr. Jose
Rizal's walk from Fort Santiago to Bagumbayan and was called
“Last Walk to Martyrdom”where he was executed by a firing
squad.
20. traveler
Before reaching Madrid to pursue his
medical career in 1882, Jose Rizal had
many stopovers. He visited the progressive
English colony of Singapore, traversed the
historic waterway of Suez Canal via the
steamship Djemnah, reached the Italian
city of Naples, disembarked at the French
port of Marseilles, then took a train to the
historic city of Barcelona.
22. writer
Almost everything in his short life is
recorded somewhere, being himself
a regular diarist and prolific letter
writer, much of the material having
survived. His biographers, however,
have faced difficulty in translating
his writings because of Rizal's habit
of switching from one language to
another.
23. zoologist
He was a regular contributor of
specimens of reptiles,
mammals, birds, fish, insects,
crustaceans and other
invertebrates to the Dresden
Museum. For this, he was
recognized as a zoologist,
leading to the naming of a flying
lizard, a frog and a beetle after
him.
24. Rizal’s life, WORks &
Writings
Prof. Tess Sagadraca
II-DA2
Guevarra, Shirolaine P.
Floresca, Joene E.
Mirambil, Maria Cherry Ann V.
Torres, Khris, R.