General officers During the existence of the Philippine Revolutionary Army, over a hundred individuals were appointed to
General Officer grades.
Other notable officers , a
former president of the Philippines, rose to the rank of
major in the army. – Aide to Lieutenant General Antonio Luna. • General
Águeda Kahabagan y Iniquinto - Commander of the Reserve Corps from April 6, 1899. The only female general in the roster. • Colonel Agapito Bonzón • Colonel
Felipe Salvador – Commander of the Santa Iglesia faction. • Colonel
Apolinar Vélez • Colonel Alejandro Avecilla • Colonel
Francisco "Paco" Román – Aide to Lieutenant General Antonio Luna. • General
Ambrosio Flores • Colonel
Pablo Tecson – Leader,
Battle of Quingua. • Colonel Alipio Tecson – Supreme Military Commander of
Tarlac in 1900 and exiled to
Guam. • Colonel Simón Tecson – Leader of
Siege of Baler; signatory of the Biak-na-Bato Constitution. • Colonel
Pablo Astilla - Headed Infanta Column in Battle of Mabitac • Colonel Simeón Villa • Colonel Luciano San Miguel • Colonel
Joaquin Luna • Colonel José Tagle – Known for his role in the
Battle of Imus. • Lieutenant Colonel
Lázaro Macapagal – Commanding officer in-charge at the execution of Andrés and Procopio Bonifacio brothers. • Lieutenant Colonel
José Torres Bugallón – Hero of the Battle of La Loma. • Lieutenant Colonel
Regino Díaz Relova – Fought as one of the heads of columns under General
Juan Cailles in the Laguna province. • Major
Manuel Quezon – Aide to President Emilio Aguinaldo. Eventually succeeded him as the
second president of the Philippines under the United States-sponsored
Commonwealth. • Major
Eugenio Daza – Area Commander Southeastern
Samar and overall Commander and chief organizer of the
Balangiga Encounter. • Major Geronimo Gatmaitan – Commanding Officer of the presidential guards responsible for the protection of the President. • Major Juan Arce • Major Rufino Ortiz • Captain Eduardo Rusca – Aide to Lieutenant General Antonio Luna. • Captain Pedro Janolino – Commanding Officer of the Kawit Battalion. • Captain Vicente Roa • Captain Serapio Narváez – Officer of the 4th Company, Morong Battalion. • Captain Cirilo Arenas - Captain of Maguagui (Naic), Cavite. • Lieutenant García – one of Gen. Luna's favorite sharpshooters of the Black Guard units. • Corporal Anastacio Félix – 4th Company, Morong Battalion the first Filipino casualty of the Philippine–American War.
Notable officers and servicemen and their ethnic background . ;Army: • General
Juan Cailles – Franco-Indian
mestizo who led Filipino forces in Laguna • General José Valesy Nazaraire – Spanish. • Brigadier General Benito Natividad – Brigade Acting Commander in Vigan under General Tinio. • Colonel Sebastian de Castro – Spanish director of the military hospital at
Malasiqui, Pangasinan. • Major José Reyes – Instructor at the Academía Militar de Malolos. Former sergeant in the Spanish Army. • Captain Chizuno Iwamoto – Japanese officer who served on Emilio Aguinaldo's staff. • Captain
David Fagen – An
African-American Captain who served under Brigadier General Urbano Lacuna. A former Corporal in
United States Army 24th Colored Regiment. • Captain Estanislao de los Reyes – Spanish aide-de-camp to General Tinio. • Lieutenant Arsenio Romero – Spanish. • Private Harry Dennis – United States Army. • Private Meeks (given name not specified) – United States Army. • Private John Wagner – United States Army. • Earl Guenther - American deserter and canteen keeper from the 37th Infantry at the Paete garrison who served under General Juan Cailles. • Antonio Prisco – Spanish. • William McAllister – English. • Captain
Vicente Catalan – Captain of the
Philippine Navy ship
Filipinas. A
Criollo from
Cuba and a former member of the
Spanish Navy. Admiral of the Philippine Navy. ==See also==