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  1. After the Philippines became independent in 1946, it established diplomatic relations with the Nationalist government of China and continued on after it lost the mainland to the Chinese Communist Party which declared the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949 that forced the Republic of China to relocate on the island of Taiwan ...

  2. Chinese written records indicate that Filipinos had gone to China as early as 982, when Ma-yi (Mindoro) traders appeared on the coast of Guangzhou, and in 1001 when the first recorded Philippine tribute mission came, apparently from Butuan.

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  4. The Philippines was under the colonial rule of the United States from 1898 to 1946. The people of the islands now known as the Philippines were “connected” with China many centuries before they were colonized by the Spaniards in 1565.

    • Edgardo E. Dagdag
    • 2009
  5. Chinese trade in the Philippines. While historians have never established a definitive date for the first contact between China and the Philippines, the date currently accepted is 982. This was the year when merchants from the Philippines first took their items to Guangzhou and Quanzhou in search of trade opportunities, as noted by Ma Tuan-lin ...

  6. Feb 4, 2019 · The story of Binondo is the story of the Chinese-Filipino. Seizing opportunity at a time of political uncertainty, Binondo went from just another enclave of Chinese in Manila: It became a part of the Filipino psyche itself. Today there are no more sangleys or mestizos or intsiks. There are only Filipinos in Binondo.

  7. Jul 8, 2015 · 8 Jul 2015. Manila, Philippines – In 1861, a villager from the Chinese province of Fujian, sailed across South China Sea to start a new life in the Spanish colony of the Philippines. Settling...

  8. Eurocentric approaches to world/global history, shedding light on the interconnected history of China and the Philippines in a transformative period. This title is part of the Flip It Open Programme and may also be available Open Access. Check our website, Cambridge Core, for details. Phillip B. Guingona teaches Asian and world history at Nazareth

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