
One of Rizal's former residences and his self-portraits in the lakeside town of Calamba, Inland Lakes Province, Philippines. Rizal has Chinese ancestry, his ancestral home is Pujiang, Fujian, his great-grandfather went to the Philippines at the end of the 17th century to make a living, the Rizal family is a local noble family, his great-grandfather and grandfather were successively local overseas Chinese leaders and the richest man, enthusiastic about public welfare undertakings. Rizal's father and himself were well educated, and Rizal studied literature and medicine at different universities before studying in Spain. In terms of blood, Rizal is a fifth-generation Chinese mixed-race...
One of the details: transparent shell windows. I once heard Mr. Wang Ming'ai say that the windows in the Philippines are made of shells, and finally saw it, which is really strange...
Detail two: the wall. It can be seen what a wealthy family this is, rizal was finally killed by the Spanish authorities for the crime of "agitating for revolution", but in his thirties ...
Detail three
The second of Rizal's paintings is really a talented person
Detail four: small dining table and fan, this fan is manually pulled, I have seen it in a movie before, but I am not so particular.
Small hall
It is said to be Rizal's favorite fruit, according to the English literal translation is velvet fruit, please ask a knowledgeable friend to help identify
bed
The national tree of the Philippines, the narra tree, is said to belong to the rosewood class, Filipinos furniture often use this wood, now because it is rare, very valuable, the government has banned logging...
Taken on May 20, 2012, I would like to thank the predecessors and descendants of the "Huazhi" in the Philippines, if it were not for them, I would not have seen this...
Attached online information:
Rizal y Mercado (Jos Protasio) was a Filipino bourgeois nationalist Enlightenment thinker, writer, and poet, also known as Rizal, also known as Fusi Rizal. He is the national hero of the Philippines who resisted Spanish colonial rule and fought for independence and freedom, and is one of the great figures who promoted the course of Philippine history, and has been revered and loved by the Philippine people for more than a hundred years after his death, and is respected by the Filipino people as the father of the country.
Father of the Nation of the Philippines, Fusi Rizal Park .jpg
On June 19, 1861, Li Cha was born in Kaxingba, Neihu Province, to a family of Chinese descent, whose ancestral home was Shangguo Village, Fujian Province (present-day Shangguo Community, Xintang Subdistrict, Jinjiang City, Quanzhou), and died heroically on December 30, 1896.
According to historical records, Rizal was intelligent from an early age, excellent in character and learning, and proficient in filipino and Spanish and other languages. In 1875, at the age of 14, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree, and then entered the Royal Ecclesiastical University of St. Roadton, where he studied philosophy and art, and then changed to medicine due to his mother's eye disease. At the age of 18, he wrote the inspiring patriotic poem "To the Youth of the Philippines", which won the first prize in the National Poetry Competition and was praised as a young Filipino poet, and was also persecuted by the Spanish colonial authorities.
In 1882, he went to Europe to study. Three years later, he obtained a doctorate in medicine, taught at a university, and was recognized as an accomplished scholar by European academia. Rizal was versatile, working as both a doctor and a writer, and an outstanding democratic revolutionary. From an early age, he hated the discrimination and oppression of the Filipino people by the Spanish colonial rulers, and in 1887, he taught at the European University and wrote the book "Social Tumor" in Spanish to expose and flogg the cruel rule of the Spanish colonial rulers over the Philippine people. Two years later, a sequel to the book, Reign of Greed, was published, calling on the Filipino people to wage an armed revolutionary struggle against colonial rule.
Rizal bravely walked in the footsteps of righteousness
In June 1892, Rizal returned to the Philippines. On July 3, the inaugural meeting of the "Philippine League" was organized in Manila to lead the revolutionary struggle in the Philippines, and he called for the establishment of a unified national community in the Philippines through moderate means and legal means, the development of the national economy and the improvement of the social system, which was suppressed by the Spanish colonists.
On December 30, 1896, the colonial authorities executed him for "inciting a popular rebellion by writing." Rizal was only 35 years old when he was martyred in Manila. Just before the righteousness, he wrote the desperate poem "Farewell, My Motherland" (that is, "The Last Book"), pouring out his passion for the motherland. In addition, he also left the script "With Bashi" and his autobiography "Memories of a Manila University Student" during his lifetime.
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Family ties
The Rizal Museum of the Founding Father of the Philippines has a genealogy of Rizal, which records that domingolam-CO, the great-grandfather of the Founding Father of the Philippines, was born in 1662 (that is, the first year of the Qing Kangxi Dynasty) in Shangguo Village, Fujian Province (present-day Luoshan Village, Jinjiang, Quanzhou), and moved to the Philippines at an early age. Conan's father, Siong-CO, and mother, ZUN-NIO, are also Chinese. This account of Rizal's grandfather's ancestral home is 100 years after Rizal was killed by Spanish colonial rulers on December 30, 1896
Rizal Park
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Over the years, although it has attracted the attention of many experts and scholars at home and abroad, it has not been able to obtain conclusive evidence on the Chinese side for a long time, thus becoming a century-old historical mystery.
In order to solve this historical mystery, in 1995, Guo Village on Luoshan Mountain in Jinjiang was entrusted by the Philippine patriarch Ke Fangnan (a columnist of the Philippine "Business Daily") to request the help of the Fangzhi Office of Jinjiang City. With the direct participation of Zhuang Weikun of the Fangzhi Office of Jinjiang City and Yang Qingjiang of the Quanzhou Local History Association, through excavating and immersing themselves in the study of a large number of Ke clan genealogies, we consulted the "Eight Min Tongzhi", "Min Shu", "Fujian Tongzhi", "Quanzhou Fu Zhi", "Jinjiang County Chronicle" and "Qingyuan Literature Compilation and Compilation" and other historical and cultural materials about Ke Clan, and finally from the Shangguo Ke clan 's "Genealogy of the Dongsheng Gongchangfang" that was renewed by Ke Huaichun (Zi Yang) in the twenty-third year of the Qing Dynasty (1897), it was found that the eighteenth Ke Changfeng of Shangguo Cited Shangfang. The 19th Conan (also known as Coynan according to the Koshi Shōmu ancestors) is completely consistent with the historical era and character events of the first zuxiang brother (SIONG-CO) and the second ancestor Conango (DOMINGO LAN-CO) in the Philippine "Rizal Family Tree", and has uniqueness.
After in-depth research, the consonants of "DONG", "Siong", and "Hokkien" and "LAI" are pronounced briefly similar to the mood word "勷", which caused Conango to be heard by the priest when he was baptized in the Philippines in 1697 to declare his father's name, resulting in Changfeng filling in as Xiang; and Conango should be translated as Conango, and "brother" is a title. Finally, according to the relevant genealogical data of China and the Philippines, the lineage of Fuxi Rizal in China and the Philippines is as follows:
Tang Bian Shu (I Ke Clan Kai Ji Nan Tang Ancestor) - Shan Weng (II) - Guang Zhen (i.e. Nian QiZhi Zheng III) - Yun Cong (IV) - Zhi (5 Ke Clan Kai Ji Shang Guo Shi Zu) - Song Lao (6th) - Ci (7th) - Wan Qing (8th) - Zong Xian (9th) - ? (10th) - Hong (11th Kai ShangGuo Shangfang Sect) - Juniper (Zi Zhongguo XII) - Tingzuo (13th) - Bo Li (14th) - Hefu (15th) - Cai Jing (16th) - Congyou (17th) - Changfeng (DONG). LAI XVIII is revered as the "Rizal Family Tree" I of the Philippines, mistranslated as Siong-CO) - Domingo LAM - CO XIX - FRANCISCO MERCADO XXVII - JUAN MERCADO XXI - FRANCISO MERCADO RIZAL XXIR - JOSE RIZAL XXII).
This major research result was noted until December 1998, "The Genealogy of the Ke Clan of Fuxi Lizal in Shangguo Village, Jinjiang, Fujian Province", "The Genealogy of the Lizal Family in China and the Philippines", "The History of the Genealogy of the Guo Ke Clan in Nantang", "The Ancestral Traces of the Shangguo Village and the Ke Clan" written by Zhuang Weikun and Yang Qingjiang respectively, which immediately aroused a huge response in the Filipino-Chinese society after being published in the Philippines World Journal, ShangBao and other relevant newspapers and periodicals. It has also obtained consensus and strong confirmation from the Philippine side.