Battle of Tres de Abril

The Battle of Tres de Abril (Filipino: Labanan ng ikatatlo ng Abril, Cebuano: Gubat sa Ikatulo sa Abril, Spanish: Batalla del Tres de Abril) occurred in 3 April 1898, during the Philippine Revolution. It was fought in the city of Cebu, a month after the Revolt of Cebu began.

Battle of Tres de Abril
Revolt of Cebu
Part of the Philippine Revolution

Historical marker at Tres de Abril Street, Cebu City
Date3–8 April 1898
Location
Result Spanish victory
Belligerents
Katipunan Spanish Empire
Commanders and leaders
  • Leon Kilat
  • Arcadio Maxilom
  • Florencio Gonzales
  • Florencio Llamas
  • Jose Ignacio Paua
  • Bonifacio Aranas
Fernando Primo de Rivera
Strength
5,000 katipuneros 500 cazadores
1 gunboat
1 cruiser
Casualties and losses
unknown unknown

Battle

At 5 AM on 4 April, the rebels drove the Governor, General Montero, and his Spanish volunteers into Fort San Pedro and took control of Cebu City.[1]:402 When the gunboat Maria Cristina opened fire, the rebels retreated to the Chinese quarter of Lutao.[1]:402 On 7 April, 500 men of the 73rd Native Regiment and Spanish cazadores arrived under the command of General Tejeiro, and with the cruiser Don Juan de Austria, forcing the rebels to retreat to San Nicolas.[1]:403 The Spanish continued their pursuit of the rebels on 8 April into the mountain region.[1]:404.

Aftermath

Leon Kilat was killed by his aide-de-camp, Apolinario Alcuitas, on April 8, 1898. The rebels then withdrew out of the city few weeks after he died. However, some of his generals, like General Maxilom, managed to capture some towns in the province such as Toledo and Balamban.

There is a commemorative monument for Leon Kilat on Kilat Street in Cebu City for the 3-day capture of Cebu City.

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References

  1. Foreman, J., 1906, The Philippine Islands, A Political, Geographical, Ethnographical, Social and Commercial History of the Philippine Archipelago, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons

Sources

  • Foreman, John (1906). The Philippine Islands. A political, geographical, ethnographical, social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago and its political dependencies, embracing the whole period of Spanish rule (3rd ed.). New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Further reading

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