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Jose Rizal inspired his followers, including the fiery rebel Andres Bonifacio, who
attended that single original La Liga meeting and reestablished the group after
Rizal's arrest. Bonifacio and two associates also tried to rescue Rizal from a
Spanish ship in Manila Harbor in the summer of 1896. By December, however,
the 35-year-old Rizal was tried in a sham military tribunal and executed by a
Spanish firing squad.
Just one year after the Katipunan movement began its revolt, Andres Bonifacio
was executed at the age of 34 by a fellow rebel, Emilio Aguinaldo.
Emilio Aguinaldo's family was relatively wealthy and held political power in the
city of Cavite, on a narrow peninsula that juts out into Manila Bay. Aguinaldo's
comparatively privileged situation afforded him the opportunity to get a good
education, just as Jose Rizal had done.
This tension came to a head when Aguinaldo rigged elections and declared
himself president in place of Bonifacio. By the end of that same year, Aguinaldo
would have Bonifacio executed after a sham trial.
Aguinaldo went into exile in late 1897, after surrendering to the Spanish, but was
brought back to the Philippines by American forces in 1898 to join in the fight
that ousted Spain after almost four centuries. Aguinaldo was recognized as the
first president of the independent Republic of the Philippines but was forced back
into the mountains as a rebel leader once more when the Filipino-American War
broke out in 1901.