Miguel Lopez de Legazpi conquered the 8 villages along Malolos River and integrated it into one entity dated November 14, 1571, and constituted it as an Encomienda de Malolos the Adelantado entrusted the settlements to conquistador Don Marcos de Herrera. On April 5, 1572, Legazpi merges the encomiendas of Malolos and Calumpit into a single entity to form a new town of Calumpit with Juan Moron and Herrera as co-encomenderos. On April 15, 1572, Legazpi entrusted 6 villages along Atlag River and given it to Don Jeronimo Tirado. Nine years later, Malolos was officially established as a town and included it in Bulacan and dismembered on Alcaldia de Calumpit on June 11, 1580, and accepted as priory with Fray Matheo de Mendoza as its first minister in an Augustinian Council held in Tondo Convent but the civil administration still belongs to its encomendero at that time, Don Jeronimo Tirado. The
Tagalog constituted the majority of the Malolos populace although it is said that the town had a
Kapampangan origin; the name Malolos is a Spanish pronunciation of Kapampangan word
maluslús. They were led by prominent families, among them are descendants of the royal clans of Gatbontons, Gatmaitan, Gatsalian (Gatchalian), Dimagiba, Lakandola, Ladia and Lacancale and in the 17th-19th centuries,
Chinese Filipino families through
Tondo and
Binondo, such as Chichioco, Cojuangco, Chiong, Chico, Cunanan, Tantocos, Tanchangco, Tanjosoy, Tengco, Tenjeco, Tiongson, Lomotan, Manahan, joined by
Spanish Filipino families of Adriano, Bautista, Jacinto, Reyes, Santos, Rustia, de Leon, Agustin, Vasquez, Valenzuela, Crisostomo and Estrella.
Chinese Filipino traders settled in Malolos starting in 1670 for economic opportunity. The settlers increased, and Malolos began engaging with textile, rice production. However, the Chinese are expelled from the town on June 30, 1755, due to political and social issues. On August 31, 1859, Malolos was divided into three independent towns; "Malolos", "Barasoain, and "Santa Isabel". These new towns are former districts of Malolos, with own respective Presidente Municipal and Parish priests. With the beginning of American rule in 1903, these towns were again reunited into a single municipality. The two other districts became barangays under the political jurisdiction of Malolos. A major factor in the progress of Malolos was the opening of the
Manila–Dagupan railways in April 1892. Malolos was first organized into a formal municipal unit in 1822 when the first "alcalde constitucional" or municipal head was appointed. He was Jorge de Victoria, a Filipino, who like all succeeding "alcaldes", served for one year. He was followed by thirty-one other "alcaldes", with Juan Dimagiba as the thirty-first. In 1859, Malolos was subdivided into three administrative districts; Malolos, Barasoain and Santa Isabel. Juan Dimagiba became the first "alcalde" of the down-scaled Malolos. There were 12 others who served as "alcaldes" from 1859 to 1879, the first one being Mariano C. Cristobal and the second being Capitan Tomas Tanchanco, whose term marked the start of civil turmoil in the town.
Philippine Republic of 1899 in session Malolos is the historical site of the constitutional convention of 1898 that led to the establishment of the
First Philippine Republic, the first republic in Asia, led by
Emilio Aguinaldo. Malolos served as the capital of the short-lived republic from 1898 to 1899. In 1899, after the Malolos Constitution was ratified, the Universidad Scientifico Literaria de Filipinas was established in Malolos,
Bulacan. It offered Law as well as Medicine, Surgery and Notary Public; Academia Militar,(the Philippine's First Military School) which was established on October 25, 1898; and The Burgos Institute, (the Philippine's first law school) and an exclusive school for boys. The Congress of the
Revolutionary Government of the Philippines convened in Barasoain Church in Malolos on September 15, 1898. On the 18th, Aguinaldo proclaimed Malolos as the capital of the Philippines. The first important act of the Congress was the ratification on September 29, 1898, of the
independence proclamation at
Kawit,
Cavite of June 12, 1898. On October 19, 1898, by virtue of an act of Congress, the Universidad Literaria de Filipinas was established. It was also in Malolos on December 20, 1898, that General Emilio Aguinaldo declared December 30 of every year as a day of national mourning. Arguably, the greatest achievement and for which the Malolos Congress was known was the framing of the
Malolos Constitution, prepared by a committee headed by Felipe Calderón, was approved by the congress after amendments have been made on January 20, 1899, sanctioned by Aguinaldo the next day and promulgated on January 22. The last congressional act of the Malolos Congress was the inauguration of the Philippine Republic with Aguinaldo as the President on January 23, 1899, amidst the people's jubilation. On March 31, 1899, at the height of the
Philippine–American War, Aguinaldo ordered General
Antonio Luna to set the Malolos Church including its huge silver altar on fire as part of their strategy called "Scorched Earth Policy" where everything will be rendered useless. Malolos was destroyed when the Americans captured the capital. Aguinaldo escaped to
San Fernando, Pampanga before the American Forces arrived at Malolos.
Malolos as the capital of Bulacan More than a year after the 1899 Battle of Malolos and the victory of and occupation by American forces, the national seat of power was officially conferred again to
Manila and on February 27, 1901, by the virtue of Act No. 88 of the
Philippine Commission, the commission officially transferred the provincial seat from the heavily damaged town of
Bulakan to the nearby town of Malolos and it became the capital of Bulacan. On January 12, 1904, by virtue of Act No. 1038, the former municipalities of Barasoain and Santa Isabel were merged with Malolos, with Barasoain designated as the municipal seat. The Casa Presidencia de Malolos was converted as the new Casa Real of Bulacan (became Casa Real Shrine) making it as the new Official Office and Residence of Governor until 1930 when the new Provincial Capitol Building in Barrio Guinhawa, also in Malolos was built. in Malolos, built in 1930
Governments of Malolos after the Philippine–American War •
During the American Period After the War, the Americans appointed a martial law administrator in the person of Jose Reyes Tiongson. He served as "presidente politico militar" from 1901 to 1902. With the capture of Aguinaldo in
Palanan,
Isabela and the defeat of most of the Filipino armed forces all over the country, the Americans began to put up a network of local government units. The municipality of Malolos was re-organized, composed of the districts of Malolos, Barasoain and Santa Isabel. Appointed "presidente municipal" or town mayor was Ramon Gonzalez de Leon of Sitio Tampoy, one of the original members of the Katipunan Balangay Apuy. He was in the post for two years, 1903 to 1905. He and the nine others who followed him were all appointive officials. When the Philippines became a
commonwealth, Leon Valencia was elected mayor in 1937, the first ever elected. Diosdado Dimagiba succeeded him in 1940 but had to vacate the position because of the Japanese conquest. Also in this period, the Malolos Municipal Hall facing the Malolos Church was built, in a manner of Neo-Classical Roman Style. •
During the Japanese Occupation The Japanese appointed two "punong bayan" or mayors, Luis Peralta and Ignacio Tapang. After the joint US and Philippine Commonwealth armed forces liberated Malolos in March 1945, Adonis P. Maclang of the guerrillas' Bulacan Military Area was appointed guerrilla mayor of the town, before battle for the liberation of Bulacan, the local Filipino forces of the 3rd and 32nd Infantry Division of the
Philippine Commonwealth Army and 3rd Constabulary Regiment of the
Philippine Constabulary was liberated in Malolos to helping the local guerrilla resistance fighters of the Bulacan Guerrilla Unit and American troops of the U.S. Army against the Japanese in 1945 at the end of World War II, followed by the appointment of Isberto Crisostomo as civilian town mayor in 1946. The first post-war election was held in 1946 and Carlos Maclang was elected mayor.
Contemporary history On June 30, 1998, Malolos was the site again for another
presidential inauguration, this time of
Joseph Estrada when he was inaugurated at
Barasoain Church as the 13th
President of the Philippines. Estrada, whose real surname is Ejercito, traced his ancestry to the Ejercitos who were prominent in the history of Malolos. The construction of the Malolos flyover in summer of 2004 marked a new milestone being the first in the city. The structure, part of the former Philippine President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's Bridge Program, was constructed in a record-breaking 60 days only according to the
Department of Public Works and Highways. The structure was built to solve daily traffic jams, which have become a bane to motorists and to employees in both private and government offices in the city. This remarkable feat hastened not only the city's development in commerce and trade but also that of its neighboring municipalities as well. On July 28–30, 2008, the city hosted the first National Conference for Philippine-Spanish Relations. This is a project of both the Province of Bulacan's research arm, the Center for Bulacan Studies of
Bulacan State University, and by the Samahang Pangkasaysayan ng Bulacan, Incorporated.
Cityhood In February 1999,
Bulacan's 1st congressional district representative
Wilhelmino Sy-Alvarado authored a bill converting the then-
municipality of Malolos into a
component city, which was approved as
Republic Act No. 8754 on November 4. The plebiscite for the ratification, along with that for
Tuguegarao,
Cagayan (whose cityhood was approved through
RA No. 8755), was scheduled on December 18. A plebiscite was conducted in 402 precincts in 51
barangays; wherein residents rejected the cityhood bid. including improper counting of votes; the reason mayor Restituto Roque, along with two other individuals, on December 29, filed an electoral protest before the
Commission on Elections, seeking the nullification of the plebiscite results and asking for a recount. It was said that several ballots were written by a person, while others were missing. Malolos eventually became the second town in Bulacan to be a city, following
San Jose del Monte. Danilo Domingo, who had opposed the cityhood and defeated Roque in the
2001 elections, became the first city mayor. In 2010, the city government, through the
City Ordinance No. 24-2010, declared December 18 of every year to be the celebration of the cityhood.
Invalidation of the Lone District of Malolos Act Legislative bills were filed in the
14th Congress in 2007 to create a separate, lone legislative district for Malolos. filed on March 4, 2008, also by Sy-Alvarado, and was passed by the
House of Representatives on April 29. On May 1, 2009, the bill lapsed into law as
Republic Act No. 9591 without the
president's signature, amending the city charter (
RA No. 8754). In August, the
Commission on Elections (COMELEC) issued
Resolution No. 09-0544, on the allocation of a legislative district for Malolos, concerning the said law. However, on June 16, four individuals from the city had filed a petition, with the COMELEC as respondent, questioning the constitutionality of
RA No. 9591 The court cited the failure to show official records that the city's population would reach that number in time for
the May elections. The city was then reverted to Bulacan's first legislative district, which also currently comprises five municipalities. At that time, the province was represented in Congress through
four districts. ==Geography==