As many as two hundred thousand Filipino …

Years: 1888 - 1899

As many as two hundred thousand Filipino civilians die, largely because of famine and disease, by the end of the war, according to historian Gregorio Zaide.

Atrocities are committed on both sides.

Although Aguinaldo' s government does not have effective authority over the whole archipelago and resistance is strongest and best organized in the Tagalog area of Central Luzon, the notion entertained by many Americans that independence is supported only by the "Tagalog tribe" is refuted by the fact that there is sustained fighting in the Visayan Islands and in Mindanao.

Although the ports of Iloilo on Panay and Cebu on Cebu are captured in February 1899, and Tagbilaran, capital of Bohol, in March, guerrilla resistance continues in the mountainous interiors of these islands.

Only on the sugar-growing island of Negros do the local authorities peacefully accept United States rule.

On Mindanao the United States Army faces the determined opposition of Christian Filipinos loyal to the republic.

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