Main Page | See live article | Alphabetical index

Flags of the Philippine Revolution

During the Philippine Revolution, various flags were used by the Katipunan secret society and its various factions, and later, after the Katipunan had been dissolved, the Philippine Army and its Civil Government.

Other flags were the personal battle standards of different military zone commanders operating around Manila.

The flags shown in this article are the official flags recognized during the Philippine Centennial celebration in 1998. This set of flags is much erroneously attributed to as evolutionary predecessors for the current Flag of the Philippines.

While many of the depicted symbols and layouts on some of the flags have inspired the national flag, there is no direct relationship.

Katipunan flags

With the establishment of the Katipunan, Andres Bonifacio requested his wife, Gregoria de Jesus, to create a flag for the society. De Jesus devised a simple red flag bearing the society's acronym, KKK, in white and arranged horizontally at the center. This was the first official flag of the society.

Some members of the Katipunan used other variations. One variaton has the three Ks arranged in the form of a triangle. Some others used a red flag with only one K.

When the revolution heated up, the Magdiwang faction of the Katipunan, which operated in Manila under Andres Bonifacio, adopted a flag consisting of a red banner with white sun, at the center of which is a white baybayin (the ancient Tagalog script) letter ka. The sun intially had an indefinite number of rays and was later standardized to eight rays, to represent the eight provinces which first took up arms against the Spain (Manila, Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, and Nueva Ecija). This eight-rayed sun was later used in the national flag of the Philippines.
The Magdalo faction of the Katipunan, which operated in Cavite under Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo used a flag, similar to the Magdiwang faction's. It features a white sun with a red baybayin letter ka.

This emblem has recently been revived by a group of traitorous officers from the Armed Forces of the Philippines calling themselves the Magdalo group. These officers rebelled against the government of Pres. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo at the behest of Senator Gregorio Honasan (see 2003 Makati Mutiny).

Personal flags

Andres Bonifacio, the father of the Katipunan, had a personal flag which depicts a white sun with an indefinite number of rays on a field of red. Below the sun are three white Ks arranged horizontally. This flag was first unveiled on August 23, 1896 during the Cry of Pugadlawin where the assembled Katipuneros tore their cedulas (poll tax certificates) in defiance of Spanish authority. The flag was used later during the Battle of San Juan del Monte on August 30, 1896, the first major battle of the Philippine Revolution.
General Mariano Llanera who fought in the provinces of Bulacan, Tarlac, Pampanga, and Nueva Ecija used a black flag with a white K on the left and a white skull-and-bones on the right. Bonifacio referred to the flag as Bungo ni Llanera (Llanera's Skull).
General Pio del Pilar, the hero of Makati, used a red banner which has a white equilateral triangle on the mast with a K at each corner. At the center of the triangle was a mountain with the sun rising behind it. The flag was called Bandila ng Matagumpay (Victorious Flag) and was first used on July 11, 1895. The flag was also one of the first to depict an eight-rayed sun.
General Gregorio del Pilar, referred to as the Boy General, used a tricolor banner with a blue triangle at the mast and a red stripe at the top of the flag and a black stripe at the bottom. Del Pilar patterned his flag after that of Cuba's, which then was also revolting against Spain.

First Official Flag

At the Naic Assembly of March 17, 1897, the Katipunan military leaders decided to adopt a flag with a new design. This new flag was red and depicted a white sun with eight rays and a face. This flag became the first official flag of the Filipinos. The flag was used for less than a year because the Filipinos signed a truce with Spanish authorities (see Pact of Biak-na-Bato) on December 14 to 15, 1897.

References