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58 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Don Juan |
The vessel Rizal rode on his second soujorn abroad |
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Amoy, China |
Rizal did not land here because of the rainy weather and that it was reportedly dirty |
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Xiamen |
The current name of Amoy (China) |
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Sainz de Varanda |
Governor Terrero's former secretary who was sent to spy on Jose Rizal |
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Yokohama |
The first place Rizal arrived to in Japan |
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Tokyo Hotel |
The hotel Rizal stayed in while he was in Tokyo |
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Juan Perez Caballero |
The secretary of the Spanish legation in Japan where Rizal eventually moved to. |
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Usui Seiko |
The Japanese woman whom Rizal had a serious romantic episode with |
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Osei San |
The other name of Usui Seiko |
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Belgic |
The English vessel Rizal rode to go to US, allegedly carrying passengers infected with cholera |
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San Francisco |
Where Rizal first landed after he rode Belgic |
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Oakland |
The next destination of Rizal after San Francisco |
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New York |
The next destination of Rizal after Oakland |
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Jim Crow (laws) |
These laws advocated the segregation of the colored people from Caucasians, prohibiting marriage and mingling between members of various races. |
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Jose Alejandrino |
The room mate of Rizal who asked him about his impressions about America, making him comment that "America is the land par excellence of freedom but only for the whites." |
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Liverpool |
The first place Rizal arrived in as he got to England |
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Antonio (Ma.) Regidor |
Rizal stayed as a guest in this person's house while the hero was in London |
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(Dr.) Reinhold Rost |
The librarian of the British Foreign Office the Rizal became acquainted with while he was staying with the Beckett family |
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(Dr.) Reinhold Rost |
The person who introduced Rizal to the authorities of the British Museum. |
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Sucesos (en) las Islas Filipinas |
A book of Philippine history which Rizal encountered in the British Museum and which he eventually annotated and republished |
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(Dr.) Antonio de Morga |
A lieutenant governor of the Philippines and member of the Royal Audiencia who wrote a book about Philippine History entitled "Sucesos en las Islas Filipinas" |
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Graciano Lopez Jaena |
First editor of La Solidaridad |
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La Solidaridad |
A newspaper that was the organ of reformists in Spain |
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Circulo Hispano Filipino |
This was first headed by Felipe de la Corte with its secretary known as Dominador Gomez (aka Franco Ramiro) |
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Asosacion Hispano Filipina |
This organization superceded Circulo Hispano Filipino and is composed of only Filipino reformists |
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Laon-Laan, Dimas-Alang |
Pen names of Rizal in La Solidaridad |
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Gertrude Beckett |
Rizal was enamored with this woman while he was in England |
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Centennary of the French Revolution (1789) |
This event was about to be commemorated as Rizal arrived in France |
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Nelly, Adelina |
Two daughters of Edward Boustead |
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Bibliotheque National |
Where Rizal did research, studied French and had classes in Fencing while he was in France |
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Kidlat |
A social club with "lightning" as the meaning of its name, disappearing as soon as it was conceived |
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Indios Bravos |
The group that followed after Kidlat club, drawing its inspiration from American Indians |
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Buffalo Bill |
A show organized by American frontiers like Willow Cody which featured native Americans (Indians) |
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International Association of Filipinologists |
An international convention Rizal wanted to hold which was not supported by the French authorities |
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(Dr.) Ferdinand Blumentritt |
The person who would have been the president of the International Association of Filipinologists, had it been approved by the French authorities |
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Por Telefono |
Rizal's reaction to the writings of Fr. Salvador Font who wrote against the reading of Noli me Tangere |
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Jacoby (sisters) |
Rizal lived with these sisters as he was staying in Brussels, Belgium |
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El Filibusterismo |
The sequel to Noli me Tangere which Rizal wrote while he was in Belgium |
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Biarritz (France) |
Where Rizal finished writing his 2nd novel |
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Leonor Rivera |
Rizal's fiancee who eventually married an English engineer |
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Henry Kipping |
The English engineer who Rizal's fiancee eventually married |
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Wenceslao Retana |
A pro-Spanish writer who Rizal challenged to a duel until the former apologized |
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Antonio Luna |
This person quarrelled with Rizal over Nelly Boustead |
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Manuel Earnshaw |
The man that Nelly Boustead eventually married |
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Marcelo (H.) Del Pilar |
The rival that Filipinos in Asosacion Hispano Filipina pitted against Rizal |
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F. Meyer-Van Loo Press |
A printing press in Ghent that agreed to print Rizal's book in installments |
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Valentin Ventura |
Rizal's friend that paid off all the printing costs of Rizal's 2nd novel |
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Melbourne |
Rizal rode on this steamer on his way to Hong Kong after finishing the printing of his 2nd novel |
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(Queen Regent) Maria Cristina |
The person Rizal wrote a letter to so his family could join him in Hong Kong before Christmas |
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Rednaxela Street, Remedios Terrace |
Where Rizal set up two clinics in Hong Kong |
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Lorenzo (P.) Marquez |
A Portuguese Physician that helped Rizal build up a clientele in Hong Kong |
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La Mano Roja (The Red Hand) |
Rizal's article in Hong Kong which denounced what he saw was intentional fires set in Manila |
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La Liga Filipina |
This is an organization which had its constitution written in Hong Kong by Rizal |
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Sandakan (North Borneo) |
A place that Rizal wished the dispossessed farmers of Calamba would migrate to. |
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Eduardo de Lete |
Rizal's former rival for the hand of Consuelo Ortiga that became one of Rizal's former colleagues who attacked the hero's credibility |
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Eulogio Despujol |
The Spanish Governor General who was in place and even made sure Rizal wasn't a naturalized German when the hero returned to the Philippines to prove his detractors wrong |
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(Don) Higino Francisco |
A person whose house became the underground of Manila in Rizal's time |
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(Dr.) Jose (R.) Francisco |
Don Higino Francisco's son who recounted the story of Manila's underground |