00:00:02
it is the 18th century a life for some
00:00:06
of the coastal inhabitants of the
00:00:07
Philippines was anything but idyllic for
00:00:16
without warning they could be attacked
00:00:18
by the merciless Illinoisan the Raiders
00:00:21
of the Sulu Sea when the lanolin
00:00:25
captured people they would bore a hole
00:00:27
through their palm put a string through
00:00:30
the palm of each person
00:00:33
[Music]
00:00:45
these Raiders were fearsome and fearless
00:00:48
in battle even against better armed
00:00:50
technologically superior colonial forces
00:00:56
[Music]
00:00:58
to the Western colonists the Raiders
00:01:01
were nothing more than barbaric outlaws
00:01:03
of pirates and they were hunted down as
00:01:06
such
00:01:07
[Music]
00:01:12
it's very hard for someone who's not
00:01:14
used to seeing slave raiding to
00:01:17
understand slave reading during those
00:01:20
times was legal there is speculation
00:01:24
that these Raiders were not the savages
00:01:27
they were made out to be but nearly
00:01:29
indigenous people defending their way of
00:01:32
life against a foreign oppressor but
00:01:37
there is little doubt that these Raiders
00:01:39
were skilled fighters and deadly
00:01:41
swordsmen they were also expert sailors
00:01:48
and builders of formidable vessels of
00:01:50
war but these were no ragtag band of
00:01:56
marauders they were a well-organized
00:01:59
force that could attack with precision
00:02:01
and strategy and they gave the Western
00:02:05
colonial forces a run for their money
00:02:25
it is December the 8th 1720 in the
00:02:29
southernmost reaches of Spanish occupied
00:02:31
Philippines stands Zamboanga City
00:02:34
protecting the city's fort pillar
00:02:41
the garrison of 600 Spanish soldiers
00:02:44
have already fought off several local
00:02:46
rebel attempts to take the fort but on
00:02:55
this day they will face a threat of
00:02:57
unprecedented proportions
00:03:07
heading their way hundreds of ships
00:03:10
carrying 3,000 battle-hardened Raiders
00:03:19
and the Spaniards are grossly
00:03:21
outnumbered the battle for Fort Pillow
00:03:32
is about to begin
00:03:38
[Music]
00:03:45
Zamboanga City sits at the tip of the
00:03:48
southernmost Peninsula of the
00:03:50
Philippines
00:03:54
it is by no means a bustling metropolis
00:03:56
these days but it is still strategically
00:03:59
located along an important sea route
00:04:02
between the northern and southern
00:04:03
regions of the Philippines
00:04:09
it was Zamboanga geographical advantage
00:04:12
that made it valuable to the Catholic
00:04:14
Spaniards who colonized it in the
00:04:16
sixteenth century
00:04:19
to protect their interests the Spanish
00:04:22
colonists built forts to discourage
00:04:25
potential invaders at the front line of
00:04:28
these defenses was fought del Pilar a 10
00:04:32
meter high fortress that sprawled over
00:04:34
two acres
00:04:37
[Music]
00:04:44
[Music]
00:04:46
one of the most celebrated attacks at
00:04:50
Port Pilar was the 1720 attack of the
00:04:53
Maguindanao King the Lassie
00:04:55
he was the king of Bullock in
00:04:57
Maguindanao Roger the lassie was
00:05:09
planning the attack on some Wonga City
00:05:11
together with the joint forces of the
00:05:13
Zulu Sultanate the Zulu and Maguindanao
00:05:17
Sultanate's were then the two main
00:05:19
kingdoms controlling the Muslim colonies
00:05:22
of the southern Philippines with the
00:05:26
king of maguindanao Raja tulasi at the
00:05:28
helm they launched a bloody attack on
00:05:31
Fort Alon attack some Wonga burned the
00:05:35
town around the fort cut dog provisions
00:05:38
the line of provisions for the Spaniards
00:05:40
and began war against the soldiers of
00:05:44
his side afford the taking the fort
00:05:47
would not be easy for Raja Dalhousie and
00:05:49
his fighters this was a structure
00:05:52
designed to withstand even the
00:05:54
destructive force of cannonballs
00:05:57
every possible approach to the fort was
00:06:00
defended by rows of Spanish artillery
00:06:07
but even with their superior defenses in
00:06:10
weaponry the Spanish soldiers are
00:06:12
greatly outnumbered 1 to 5
00:06:20
[Music]
00:06:25
[Applause]
00:06:29
Roger de la sees militia armed with only
00:06:33
an assortment of swords plunge
00:06:35
aggressively into battle against the
00:06:37
cannons and firearms of the Spaniards
00:06:51
Roger de la sees men are decimated by
00:06:54
cannon fire but they are relentless
00:07:03
wave after wave of Raiders attack before
00:07:10
until they finally reach the outer wards
00:07:14
[Music]
00:07:20
the Spanish soldiers a resort to
00:07:23
desperate measures to fend off the
00:07:25
Raiders they throw rocks in boiling
00:07:29
water and allow these men as they scaled
00:07:31
the walls at the fort
00:07:36
[Applause]
00:07:43
Roger de la seize Raiders fight with a
00:07:46
vengeance the desire to rid San belanger
00:07:49
of the Spanish drives them forward they
00:07:52
really have to suppress the Spanish
00:07:54
presence here in the peninsula because
00:07:57
the the fort was the base operations
00:08:00
point to check on slave raiding going to
00:08:04
the north and coming back according to
00:08:07
some historians slavery had been
00:08:09
practiced among some tribes in the
00:08:11
Philippines before the arrival of
00:08:12
Western powers but it was never a
00:08:15
widespread or frequent activity but the
00:08:20
arrival of the Spanish and their desire
00:08:22
to dominate trade in the region would
00:08:25
trigger an escalation of slave raiding
00:08:28
the people of the southern Sultanate
00:08:31
would defy their self-proclaimed Spanish
00:08:33
masters by targeting Christian
00:08:35
communities in the north
00:08:37
[Music]
00:08:43
the Spanish referred to the slave
00:08:46
Raiders as morals after the Muslim
00:08:49
fighters they encountered on Spanish
00:08:50
soil some seventy-five years old
00:08:53
[Music]
00:08:56
but they were in fact from three
00:08:58
different tribes and they would
00:09:00
challenge Spanish authority throughout
00:09:02
its occupancy
00:09:04
[Music]
00:09:12
Pyrus that were described by the
00:09:15
colonial powers or coroner rule actually
00:09:17
more activities of different tribes in
00:09:20
the Mindanao area as well as Rockefeller
00:09:23
go but there were actually three
00:09:26
particular groups of Muslims that were
00:09:29
identified in this College Association
00:09:32
one mr. Ballentine three tribes or sama
00:09:36
that occupied the chain of islands
00:09:40
between
00:09:41
Basilian and Sulu Island now the second
00:09:46
one which very important in in piracy
00:09:50
history were the Eternals the Illinois
00:09:56
and Samar were both long-standing
00:09:58
seafaring communities they would often
00:10:01
join forces with the Tao stroke a tribe
00:10:03
without the maritime experience but
00:10:06
known for its fierce warriors and
00:10:07
widespread political tower
00:10:09
[Music]
00:10:14
it was in fact the Tau sig that
00:10:16
controlled the Sulu Sultanate in the
00:10:18
south with the lineage of Towson
00:10:20
Sultan's and high-ranking officials
00:10:22
dating as far back as the 15th century
00:10:25
[Music]
00:10:33
retaliatory attacks conducted pub salut
00:10:35
bogie Nana always carried these
00:10:39
contingents no the internal the
00:10:42
belonging sama
00:10:43
and of course it has a warning but
00:10:48
historians also question whether the
00:10:50
Raiders from the southern Philippines
00:10:51
should be called pirates it comes down
00:10:55
to intent were these Raiders out for
00:10:59
personal gain or were they simply
00:11:01
serving their local political masters
00:11:03
all talk about piracy deal with the
00:11:07
problem of terminology that using the
00:11:10
word in English word pirate is actually
00:11:14
misleading in some respects because it
00:11:17
doesn't cover Raiders it doesn't cover
00:11:20
people erected on behalf of the state
00:11:24
for these philippine Morrow's the raids
00:11:27
to the north and attacks on spanish
00:11:29
forces were acts of retaliation against
00:11:32
the foreign occupier most of these raids
00:11:37
were also sanctioned by the sultanate in
00:11:39
the name of an even higher cause Islam
00:11:45
the Philippines is made up of three main
00:11:48
regions mindanao in the south Visayas
00:11:51
and central Philippines and Luzon in the
00:11:54
north
00:11:56
aslam reached the shores of the southern
00:11:58
philippines in 1380 and began to spread
00:12:01
north but it would later come up against
00:12:06
an obstacle in the shape of the cross
00:12:12
[Music]
00:12:19
there was certainly a great deal of
00:12:22
pressure from the south for poor
00:12:25
populations in the Visayas to become is
00:12:27
llama sized but the presence of the
00:12:30
Spanish in the Visayas and in the
00:12:32
southern resort to a great degree
00:12:34
disrupted that spread of Islam in fact
00:12:38
the Spanish colonial administrators
00:12:41
thought it was their responsibility to
00:12:43
prevent the spread of Islam from the
00:12:45
south to the Christianized populations
00:12:48
to the north at its peak the Spanish had
00:12:56
an impressive empire that stretched
00:12:58
across much of the world
00:13:01
these conquests were motivated not only
00:13:04
for the wealth of these colonies but the
00:13:07
opportunity to propagate Christianity in
00:13:10
the Philippines they landed in Luzon in
00:13:13
the north from here Christianity spread
00:13:18
displacing Islam and indigenous tribal
00:13:21
beliefs
00:13:21
[Music]
00:13:26
in the predominantly Muslim South
00:13:28
however Christianity's growing influence
00:13:30
was viewed with scorn
00:13:32
[Music]
00:13:36
where the Spanish is concerned it wasn't
00:13:39
always about what people in the South
00:13:42
were after it was more that the presence
00:13:44
of the Spanish really undermined their
00:13:47
commercial interests in the region now
00:13:49
you had a new power in the region which
00:13:52
was exerting its own agendas and its own
00:13:54
influences what the Sultanate in the
00:13:57
South wanted to do was to maintain their
00:13:59
power right if not increase it a little
00:14:01
bit more in the power struggle that
00:14:04
ensued both sides used their religious
00:14:07
ideologies to further their influence
00:14:12
for the Muslim Sultanate eradicating the
00:14:15
Christian Spanish presence in Zamboanga
00:14:17
was one of their top priorities
00:14:21
but how could the sword-wielding tribes
00:14:23
of the south stand up against a
00:14:25
militarily superior foe how that they
00:14:29
have assembled a flotilla of battleships
00:14:31
that could pose a serious threat to the
00:14:34
Spanish colonialists
00:14:37
the answer lies buried deep under
00:14:40
centuries of soil Bhutan is a small town
00:14:50
located at the northernmost region of
00:14:52
mindanao in 1977 an archaeological dig
00:14:57
would unearth the secrets of a distant
00:14:59
past evidence of an ancient maritime
00:15:06
civilization was found in this pond
00:15:12
[Music]
00:15:17
carbon dating of artifacts found point
00:15:20
to a seafaring a civilization that
00:15:22
existed in the 4th century ancient
00:15:24
mariners who traversed the seas around
00:15:27
the Philippines long before the arrival
00:15:29
of Western colonists
00:15:33
[Applause]
00:15:36
the date would eventually unearth a
00:15:38
small feat of ancient seaworthy vessels
00:15:42
[Applause]
00:15:42
[Music]
00:15:46
the people who built these ships but
00:15:48
deaf sailors with an intimate knowledge
00:15:50
of the Seas and how to navigate them the
00:15:56
slave Raiders inherited these maritime
00:15:58
skills from these early southern
00:16:00
Filipino seafarers it helped them build
00:16:04
a flourishing trade in the bounty of the
00:16:06
sea by the mid 1700s
00:16:10
these ships evolved into sturdier more
00:16:12
seaworthy craft at the scope of their
00:16:15
commercial ventures grew and fuelled by
00:16:19
a growing demand for slaves in the south
00:16:21
so too did the intensity and frequency
00:16:24
of their raiding expeditions what began
00:16:28
as small raids within the archipelago
00:16:30
went beyond Philippine seas to the
00:16:32
Straits of Malacca close to 2,000
00:16:35
kilometers away increase in slave in the
00:16:40
demand for slaves fit into a situation
00:16:42
by the Midna 18th century when something
00:16:46
very unusual unprecedented happened in
00:16:51
the Malacca Straits region and that was
00:16:54
the arrival in seasonal seasonal arrival
00:16:58
of very large numbers of Raiders from
00:17:02
the southern Philippines
00:17:07
the Illinois slave Raiders who landed
00:17:10
that the Straits of Malacca were skilled
00:17:12
warriors and they sailed formidable
00:17:15
ships
00:17:18
[Music]
00:17:20
they could go into a shallow waters they
00:17:23
had compasses even they had they they
00:17:27
had cannon on board their ships they had
00:17:30
many rowers the Elenin built long-range
00:17:35
vessels like the jiangha all along these
00:17:39
ships had a large wide keel for
00:17:41
stability and three large cloth sales on
00:17:44
sturdy collapsible tripod like masts
00:17:47
[Music]
00:17:49
these vessels were 24 to 27 meters long
00:17:53
with 6 meter wide house each had cannons
00:17:58
mounted at the bow
00:18:05
complementing the three main sales were
00:18:07
34 hours on each side
00:18:09
road by captured slaves these were their
00:18:13
flagships
00:18:14
the Illinois equivalent of a modern
00:18:16
Cruiser
00:18:18
[Music]
00:18:25
each vessel carried between a hundred
00:18:27
and a hundred and fifty men a captain on
00:18:30
Nikodim a steersman and warrior sails
00:18:33
slaves to power the office and captured
00:18:36
local guides to help navigate unknown
00:18:39
waters the ill are known used compasses
00:18:50
browse telescopes and the Stars to
00:18:52
navigate
00:18:53
they were also knowledgeable about the
00:18:56
tempestuous monsoon winds of the region
00:18:58
and used them to travel extensively
00:19:00
during the months between August and
00:19:03
October in a period called the pirate
00:19:06
season by 1830 a smaller faster and more
00:19:12
maneuverable form of raiding boats
00:19:14
replaced the drongos they were the fast
00:19:17
attack boats of the Somali raiding
00:19:19
tribes and they were called the garage
00:19:24
[Music]
00:19:26
the garage glass of vessels was built
00:19:29
from bamboo wood and the nipa palm and
00:19:32
could carry more than 100 sailors this
00:19:36
single sailed ship was 25 meters long
00:19:39
and 6 meters across and housed a powder
00:19:42
magazine and cannon at the bow with 30
00:19:47
to 60 oars on each side the garage was
00:19:50
faster than any other seagoing vessel of
00:19:52
its time
00:20:01
the raiding fleets also comprised
00:20:04
auxilary vessels called solicit pods
00:20:06
these were small coats designed for
00:20:09
coastal raids on route to a major raid
00:20:15
the fleets would collect manpower and
00:20:17
ships from friendly raiding bases along
00:20:19
the way eventually building a fearsome
00:20:22
organized sea force now when they leave
00:20:26
the shore on skeleton force they pass by
00:20:29
other bases and augment the labor into
00:20:34
the ship then when when they reach the
00:20:38
coast they usually hide their big boats
00:20:40
because it can be seen from the shore so
00:20:44
they use the solicit on the smaller
00:20:46
vessel to roll into the shorelines and
00:20:50
pretend that they are fishermen they're
00:20:54
harmless people but these slave Raiders
00:20:59
were anything but harmless
00:21:03
when the lawmen captured people they
00:21:06
would bore a hole through their palm put
00:21:08
a string through the palm of his bosom
00:21:13
Europeans were unable to do anything
00:21:17
about it at this stage they didn't have
00:21:20
their ships were were not as fast as
00:21:24
those of their runnin they they weren't
00:21:27
as maneuverable and if they will become
00:21:30
then of course they were fair game and
00:21:32
they weren't enough of them
00:21:36
unlike the ships of the raiding tribes
00:21:38
Spanish galleons were slow and ungainly
00:21:42
while they were heavily armed they're
00:21:45
deep keels prevented them from chasing
00:21:47
raiding craft into the shallows
00:21:58
but behind this clash of religious
00:22:01
doctrines was a more compelling reason
00:22:03
for the Spanish to bring the slave
00:22:04
Raiders to heal the spoils of trade with
00:22:08
the Orient something the Spanish court
00:22:10
wanted complete control
00:22:13
[Music]
00:22:26
the sea voyages of the ancient filipino
00:22:29
mariners of butuan were not restricted
00:22:32
to the Sulu seas artifacts originating
00:22:44
from China that were found here are
00:22:46
proof of the great distances traveled by
00:22:48
them and the trading activities they
00:22:50
were involved in
00:22:54
there is further proof that families of
00:22:57
the Sulu Sultanate had themselves
00:22:59
visited the resource-rich regions of
00:23:01
China for commerce
00:23:04
[Music]
00:23:06
long before the entry of Western powers
00:23:09
to the region international trade was
00:23:12
already flourishing
00:23:19
when Europeans first came to this region
00:23:22
they came for those it was those
00:23:25
products that attracted them the
00:23:27
products that couldn't be found anywhere
00:23:29
else not only spices but woods tin
00:23:34
pepper and also by the 18th century
00:23:40
those products were also very important
00:23:42
in China trade so before Europeans
00:23:47
arrived there was already a person of
00:23:50
trade between China and India and
00:23:53
Europeans simply entered into that
00:23:56
pattern the difference was that
00:23:59
Europeans wanted to control it in many
00:24:02
respects the Spanish wanted to be part
00:24:04
of this they wanted to be part of this
00:24:06
process of exchange and trade but they
00:24:10
wanted to do so in conjunction with
00:24:12
conversion and conjunction with with
00:24:15
colonization of the islands so this
00:24:18
presented some very very important
00:24:19
conflicts between the people in the
00:24:21
south and the newly arrived powers of
00:24:25
the Spanish as the Spanish seized
00:24:29
control of the Philippines the influence
00:24:31
of the Muslim South waved the new
00:24:35
Western masters sought to dominate trade
00:24:38
in Hollow the seat of power of the Sulu
00:24:40
Sultanate
00:24:44
today hollow is a mere shadow of the
00:24:47
great commercial and political power it
00:24:49
once was and while the seafaring
00:24:52
warriors slave Raiders evolved along
00:24:54
gone they're proud descendants still
00:24:57
live here this palace is roughly 300
00:25:02
plus years old to student I am the
00:25:05
Spanish
00:25:05
it is my preferred weapon because in a
00:25:11
mystical side I feel I feel the old
00:25:15
nosov the weapon in hand I feel I feel
00:25:19
the person who held this before I feel
00:25:21
this trend
00:25:25
[Music]
00:25:35
Halman Abubakar is a direct descendant
00:25:39
of tousled rulers like his warrior
00:25:42
ancestors he is an exponent of the
00:25:44
martial art of salat practicing it is
00:25:47
his way of keeping the heritage of his
00:25:49
people alive
00:25:50
[Music]
00:25:55
[Music]
00:25:59
how man is also a city councillor in
00:26:02
Holland like his tousled predecessors he
00:26:06
champions the cause of his people the
00:26:08
Muslim communities of Mindanao in
00:26:10
southern Philippines but today he does
00:26:14
so with diplomacy not the sword
00:26:19
maybe the Spain only wanted to
00:26:23
Christianize hollow force feeding us
00:26:27
with something that we don't want to
00:26:29
believe in it's like oppression so we go
00:26:32
to war and when you call us pirates for
00:26:35
doing that it's your decision
00:26:38
better to us we are fighting for
00:26:40
something we believe in we are freedom
00:26:42
fighters it is our fight for freedom
00:26:45
freedom from oppression freedom from not
00:26:49
losing your own identity amongst how
00:26:54
man's prized possessions are a variety
00:26:57
of ancient Taos hook weapons this is the
00:27:05
bottom the story goes the barong is the
00:27:07
one that also Warriors used to cut off
00:27:10
an m14 a carbine because it is the blade
00:27:16
stick as you can hear it it's pure
00:27:26
the barong was a deadly weapon a sword
00:27:29
with a single-edged leaf-shaped blade
00:27:30
made of thick tempered steel this
00:27:34
approximately 1 meter long weapon was
00:27:36
used in close hand-to-hand battle to cut
00:27:39
Spanish firearms down to size
00:27:41
[Music]
00:27:48
the Chris or Callie's was built a weapon
00:27:51
of warfare and ceremony this sword
00:27:55
measuring up to 1.2 meters in length was
00:27:58
not only carried by slave Raiders into
00:28:00
battle but also by nobles and
00:28:02
high-ranking officials of the sudden
00:28:04
Sultan it's double edged and with either
00:28:08
a smooth or wavy blade the Curris could
00:28:10
make quick work of any enemy in close
00:28:12
combat the reason for this curving x' is
00:28:20
for easy slashing the steel would
00:28:23
penetrate the ball and it'll stick so
00:28:27
it's very hard to pull so then that also
00:28:30
Warriors made made it like this so you
00:28:34
can actually pull it faster the longest
00:28:40
of the swords used by the Raiders
00:28:41
primarily the Illinois was the camp ela
00:28:45
this heavy single edged sword was often
00:28:48
adorned with hair to make it look even
00:28:50
more intimidating the results are common
00:28:53
to find camp Elan
00:28:54
with grooves cut into the blade to
00:28:56
indicate the number of lives it
00:28:58
acclaimed
00:29:00
[Music]
00:29:06
at the end of the oblate the tip of the
00:29:10
blade are two horns projecting from the
00:29:13
blunt side which is being used to pick
00:29:17
up the head a capitated body the
00:29:29
wealthier Raiders also protected
00:29:31
themselves in battle with armor this
00:29:35
heavy armor made from caribou horn or
00:29:37
steel plates was molded to fit the body
00:29:40
and held together with chainmail it
00:29:43
could deflect the blows from a sword but
00:29:45
they were useless against Spanish
00:29:46
firearms
00:29:49
[Laughter]
00:29:52
[Music]
00:29:54
even then this battle between the sword
00:29:57
and the fire harm was not dramatically
00:30:00
one-sided the Spanish fire harm called a
00:30:03
musket had its limitations a musket
00:30:08
could fire its ball bearing projectile
00:30:10
as far as 90 meters but it was
00:30:13
inaccurate and took several tedious
00:30:15
steps to reload even the best Musketeers
00:30:19
could only manage three shots per minute
00:30:21
giving ways of soar building Raiders
00:30:24
ample time to come within striking range
00:30:27
even with bayonets mounted muskets were
00:30:31
not efficient weapons for close combat
00:30:35
the battles between the slave Raiders in
00:30:38
the Spanish were clashes of ideology
00:30:40
Islam against Christianity the
00:30:43
indigenous way of life against the
00:30:45
enforced values of the occupiers the
00:30:47
might of the sword against the
00:30:49
destructive power of gunpowder and it
00:30:52
would all come to a head in Zamboanga
00:30:54
City in the southern Philippines
00:31:06
on the 8th of December 17 $20 she led a
00:31:10
3,000 strong coalition of warriors
00:31:13
against 600 Spanish soldiers at Fort
00:31:15
Pillow Zamboanga City at one point it
00:31:22
was possible that the sheer number of
00:31:24
Raiders could have overrun the fort but
00:31:27
that never happened the slave Raiders
00:31:33
attack on Fort pillar was poorly
00:31:35
conceived as musket fire it was the ship
00:31:46
the ships that the Spaniards used was
00:31:48
impossible for them to be able to go
00:31:49
close to the island so the ordered
00:31:52
steamships from England at clever ears
00:32:01
disposal with three British built
00:32:03
steamships the Maha Yanis Elcano and
00:32:06
Rana castelia
00:32:09
clever eeeh used the ship's artillery to
00:32:12
bombard the forts of belonging the
00:32:14
island for once the usually stoic
00:32:17
Raiders were shaken taking advantage of
00:32:21
the damage done by the barrage of
00:32:22
artillery fire the Spanish stormed the
00:32:25
forts this time it was the Raiders well
00:32:28
plundered the men or actually out during
00:32:33
their slave expeditions so they were met
00:32:36
in all the forts by a men who were
00:32:38
remained who were remain behind with
00:32:40
their women and children but what the
00:32:43
Spanish found awaiting them inside the
00:32:44
fort was not what they were expecting
00:32:48
faced with certain capture the Raiders
00:32:51
resorted to an unthinkable act but the
00:32:57
other men killed the women and the women
00:33:01
also killed their children so so it was
00:33:03
some they'd rather kill themselves than
00:33:06
be taken captive of the Spaniards 450
00:33:12
somehow died in battle all four of
00:33:15
balinese forts and 150 raiding ships
00:33:18
were destroyed the Spaniards granted
00:33:22
clemency to the 350 simão men and women
00:33:25
who were captured alive panglima Tapan
00:33:29
was not amongst them but they did
00:33:32
capture his pregnant wife nyla after
00:33:36
years of failed attempts the Spanish had
00:33:38
finally succeeded in destroying the
00:33:41
raiding base of belonging the island
00:33:43
eventually because his family was taken
00:33:47
captive in CBI by the Spaniards he
00:33:50
decided to surrender and from his
00:33:53
surrender in 1858 he was brought to some
00:33:58
Wonga city by the Spaniards with most of
00:34:02
their fleet destroyed and their bases of
00:34:04
operation dismantled the slave raiding
00:34:07
activities dwindled they were now at the
00:34:13
mercy of the Spaniards governor-general
00:34:15
clever Rhea used this advantageous
00:34:18
position and
00:34:19
ruler of steamships to deal one final
00:34:22
blow to the slave Raiders the critical
00:34:28
demarcation point comes with the
00:34:30
introduction of steamships because
00:34:32
steamships now can are not dependent on
00:34:35
the wind they can chase a sailing ship
00:34:38
anywhere they can be armed with guns and
00:34:42
they can attack really anyone they want
00:34:47
to
00:34:52
clever airs secret weapon put the
00:34:54
Spaniards well ahead of the Raiders his
00:34:57
coal-burning steamships were faster than
00:34:59
the slave power trading wrestles and
00:35:01
better yet the steamships were not
00:35:04
dependent on the winds they were better
00:35:06
built and were able to carry a
00:35:08
significantly more lethal battery of
00:35:10
evidence in short they marked the end of
00:35:13
the once feared navies of the Sultanate
00:35:17
[Applause]
00:35:21
because of this successful colonial span
00:35:25
no the sense of hopelessness began to to
00:35:30
enter into Muslim consciousness they had
00:35:33
only two choices
00:35:34
first to follow their SME country become
00:35:39
subjugated people or they continued to
00:35:42
resist
00:35:45
[Music]
00:35:47
the slave Raiders harbor would go down
00:35:50
fighting even with their fleet of ships
00:35:52
destroyed some amongst them continue to
00:35:55
resist the rule of the Spanish but it
00:35:57
would be in vain
00:36:19
the spanish-american war in the late
00:36:21
19th century saw the Philippines shift
00:36:24
from one colonial power to another
00:36:28
[Music]
00:36:32
the Americans not only got control of
00:36:35
the Philippines but also inherited their
00:36:37
predecessors problems with the Raiders
00:36:39
albeit on a much smaller scale the thorn
00:36:43
in the American side was a tower grader
00:36:46
called jakirah Shaqiri and his men
00:36:52
killed Americans in the area this
00:36:54
incensed the new colonial masters and
00:36:56
they responded with a vengeance
00:37:01
the ships that the Spaniards used was
00:37:04
impossible for them to be able to go
00:37:06
close to the island so the ordered
00:37:08
steamships from England at clever ears
00:37:17
disposal were three British built
00:37:19
steamships the Maha Yanis Elcano
00:37:22
and Rana castelia
00:37:25
clever eeeh used the ship's artillery to
00:37:28
bombard the forts of belonging the
00:37:30
island for once the usually stoic
00:37:33
Raiders were shaken taking advantage of
00:37:37
the damage done by the barrage of
00:37:38
artillery fire the Spanish stormed the
00:37:41
forts this time it was the Raiders well
00:37:44
plundered the men were actually out
00:37:48
during their slave expeditions so they
00:37:51
were met in all the forts by a men who
00:37:54
were remained who remained behind with
00:37:56
their women and children but what the
00:37:59
Spanish found awaiting them inside the
00:38:01
fort was not what they were expecting
00:38:04
faced with certain capture the Raiders
00:38:07
resorted to an unthinkable act but the
00:38:13
other men killed the women and the women
00:38:17
also killed their children so so it was
00:38:20
some there they'd rather kill themselves
00:38:22
than be taken captive of the Spaniards
00:38:27
450 somehow died in battle all four of
00:38:31
Bellinis forts and 150 raiding ships
00:38:34
were destroyed the Spaniards granted
00:38:39
clemency to the 350 samal men and women
00:38:41
who were captured alive panglima Tapan
00:38:45
was not amongst them but they did
00:38:48
capture his pregnant wife nyla after
00:38:52
years of failed attempts the Spanish had
00:38:55
finally succeeded in destroying the
00:38:57
raiding base of belonging the island
00:39:00
eventually because his family was taken
00:39:02
captive in CBS and by the Spaniards he
00:39:06
decided to surrender and from his
00:39:09
surrender in 1858 he was brought to some
00:39:14
Wonga city by the Spaniards with most of
00:39:18
the fleet destroyed and their bases of
00:39:21
operation dismantled the slave raiding
00:39:23
activities dwindled
00:39:27
they were now at the mercy of the
00:39:30
Spaniards governor-general plumeria used
00:39:33
this advantageous position and his
00:39:35
flotilla of steam ships to deal one
00:39:38
final blow to the slave Raiders the
00:39:42
critical demarcation point comes with
00:39:46
the introduction of steam ships because
00:39:48
steam ships now can and not depend on
00:39:51
the wind they can chase a sailing ship
00:39:54
anywhere they can be armed with guns and
00:39:58
they can attack really anyone they want
00:40:03
to
00:40:08
clever airs secret weapon put the
00:40:10
Spaniards well ahead of the Raiders his
00:40:13
coal-burning steamships were faster than
00:40:15
the slave power trading vessels and
00:40:17
better yet the steam ships were not
00:40:20
dependent on the winds they were better
00:40:22
built and were able to carry a
00:40:24
significantly more lethal battery of
00:40:26
others in short they mark the end of the
00:40:30
once feared navies of the Sultanate
00:40:33
[Applause]
00:40:37
because of this successful colonial span
00:40:41
no the sense of hopelessness began to to
00:40:46
enter into Muslim consciousness they had
00:40:49
only two choices first to follow the
00:40:53
Ricardian become subjugated people or
00:40:57
they continued to resist
00:40:59
[Music]
00:41:03
the slave Raiders however would go down
00:41:06
fighting even with their fleet of ships
00:41:09
destroyed some amongst them continued to
00:41:11
resist the rule of the Spanish but it
00:41:14
would be in vain
00:41:35
the spanish-american war in the late
00:41:37
19th century saw the Philippines shift
00:41:40
from one colonial power to another the
00:41:49
Americans not only got control of the
00:41:51
Philippines but also inherited their
00:41:53
predecessors problems with the Raiders
00:41:55
albeit on a much smaller scale the thorn
00:41:59
in the american side was a tower grader
00:42:02
called jakirah Shaqiri and his men
00:42:08
killed americans in the area this
00:42:10
incensed the new colonial masters and
00:42:12
they responded with a vengeance
00:42:18
the Americans ruthlessly hunted and
00:42:21
killed jekiri and other Raiders to the
00:42:31
Americans like the Spanish before them
00:42:33
the Raiders were mere pirates and
00:42:35
bandits
00:42:43
jakirah would eventually meet the same
00:42:46
fate as his predecessors Roger tulasi
00:42:49
and pan limit upon defeat the days of
00:42:57
raiding in the Philippines were over
00:43:02
when you look at the tousle economy in
00:43:06
the southern Philippines you would which
00:43:07
had really depended heavily on gained a
00:43:10
great deal of income from buying and
00:43:12
selling slaves and using slaves in their
00:43:14
own economy when the market for slaves
00:43:17
dried up by the late 19th century by the
00:43:21
1870s and there abouts their economy was
00:43:24
in a very marked decline because it had
00:43:28
depended so heavily on on the slave
00:43:32
selling slaves for revenue
00:43:35
[Music]
00:43:39
the sultanate eventually lost their
00:43:41
political and economic hold in Sulu and
00:43:44
it was gradually assimilated into the
00:43:46
jurisdiction of the Philippine
00:43:47
government but it retained its autonomy
00:43:50
[Music]
00:43:53
today the once wealthy and powerful
00:43:55
Sultanate sir a distant memory this
00:43:59
southern region of the Philippines faces
00:44:01
new challenges social economic and
00:44:04
cultural but some things it would seem
00:44:07
haven't changed 600 years on and there
00:44:13
are still conflicts in this region I
00:44:16
don't want my children to grow up seeing
00:44:19
Hollow like this because wherever they
00:44:22
go they would still be talk soon they
00:44:24
cannot cover land there are the earth
00:44:25
oceans and I don't want them to be
00:44:27
embarrassed with their homeland so I
00:44:30
want to be an example that we can change
00:44:33
we can change everything we can get back
00:44:36
what was lost
00:44:37
let Allah stand up again let them
00:44:40
realize how glorious are our hollow is
00:44:44
before
00:44:48
the house look like Hulman abubakr
00:44:51
are proud of their heritage and do what
00:44:54
they can to keep the memory of their
00:44:56
ancestors alive together with the
00:44:59
Illinois and somehow they once ruled a
00:45:02
mighty empire
00:45:04
[Music]
00:45:12
whether these tribes are considered
00:45:14
brutal pirates bandits or freedom
00:45:17
fighters is a question of perspective
00:45:19
but they were excellent Mariners
00:45:22
builders the most superior seagoing
00:45:25
vessels of their time fearless warriors
00:45:27
and skilled fighters and there's little
00:45:32
doubt they've earned their place in
00:45:34
history as the Raiders of the Sulu Sea
00:45:39
[Music]
00:45:59
[Music]
00:46:06
[Music]
00:46:21
[Music]