The Philippine Islands, 1493–1898 Explained

The Philippine Islands, 1493–1803
Translator:Emma Helen Blair
James Alexander Robertson
Country:United States
Language:English
Subject:Philippine history
Genre:History
Publisher:The Arthur H. Clark Company
Author:Emma Helen Blair, James Alexander Robertson

The Philippine Islands, 1493–1898, often referred to as Blair and Robertson after its two authors, was a 55-volume series of Philippine historical documents.[1] They were translated by Emma Helen Blair and James Alexander Robertson, a director of the National Library of the Philippines from 1910 to 1916.[2]

The original 55-volume set was published from 1903 through 1909 by the Arthur H. Clark Company in Cleveland, Ohio. No more than 500 sets were printed and sold between 1903 and 1909. In 1962, a reissue by photo-offset was printed in Taipeh, limited to 300 sets.[3]

While the series is still considered an important source of Philippine history for non-Spanish speakers, it has been criticized by modern historians, notably Glòria Cano, for deliberately distorting the original Spanish documents to portray the Spanish colonial rule in a negative light (the Spanish "black legend") as part of the general American political strategy of pacifying the Philippines during the American colonial period.[4] [5]

Notes and References

  1. News: Looking Back: Tradewinds. Ocampo. Ambeth R.. 2014-10-22. Philippine Daily Inquirer. 2017-09-28. en.
  2. News: Ocampo . Ambeth R. . 2018-02-02 . Looking Back: Eminent Nonlibrarians . en . Philippine Daily Inquirer . 2018-11-06.
  3. Web site: Gomez . Buddy . 2018-05-25 . Opinion: Blair & Robertson, 'The Philippine Islands 1493-1898' . 2018-11-06 . ABS-CBN News . en.
  4. Cano . Glòria . 2008 . Evidence for the Deliberate Distortion of the Spanish Philippine Colonial Historical Record in "The Philippine Islands 1493–1898" . Journal of Southeast Asian Studies . 39 . 1 . 1–30 . 10.1017/S0022463408000015 . 20071868. 159759508 .
  5. Web site: How to Research the History of Maritime Asia and the Spanish Pacific During a Pandemic . 2 July 2021 . Toynbee Prize Foundation . en.