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  1. He was the Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines from 1880 to 1883. In 1897, he again became the Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines. He temporarily suspended hostilities in the Philippine Revolution through negotiations with Emilio Aguinaldo in the Pact of Biak-na-Bato and acted briefly as Governor-General of the Philippines.

  2. The Pact of Biak-na-Bato, signed on December 14, 1897, created a truce between Spanish colonial Governor-General Fernando Primo de Rivera and the revolutionary leader Emilio Aguinaldo to end the Philippine Revolution.

    • December 14, 1897
  3. Dec 14, 2011 · "General Primo de Rivera paid the first installment of $400,000 while the two Generals were held as hostages in Biak-na-bato. We, the revolutionaries, discharged our obligation to surrender our arms, which were over 1,000 stand, as everybody knows, it having been published in the Manila newspapers.

  4. The Pact of Biak-na-Bato. Pedro Paterno, a Spaniard born in the Philippines volunteered to act as negotiator between Aguinaldo and Gov. Primo de Rivera in order to end the clashes.

  5. May 25, 2015 · Primo de Rivera graduated from Toledo General Military Academy and saw service in the Spanish army and fought in Morocco, Cuba and the Philippines and by 1910 had achieved the rank of major-general. During years in the army, de Rivera witnessed the loss of the Philippines to the United States in 1898, which effectively spelt the end of the ...

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  7. Nov 8, 2021 · What happened to the money? Gov. Gen. Fernando Primo de Rivera and Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo agreed on the payment of an 800,000-Mexican dollar (“Mex”) indemnity and the remittance of 900,000 Mex as reparations for damage to the civilian population.

  8. Fernando Primo de Rivera y Sobremonte (Seville, 1831-Madrid, 1921) was a Spanish soldier and politician who, in addition to being Governor on two occasions of the Captaincy General of the Philippines, served between 1907 and 1909 and in 1917 as Minister of War in two conservative governments chaired by Antonio Maura and Eduardo Dato.

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