THE LIFE, WORKS & WRITINGS OF RIZAL
Across
- 6. She was the youngest in the family.
- 7. This is where Jose Rizal’s ancestral house is located.
- 10. Priest who stood as Jose Rizal’s godfather.
- 14. Other term for town mayors.
- 15. The enforced or compulsory manual labor required for every male native between 16 to 60 years of age
- 16. Owner of the boarding house where Rizal stayed and has a debt to Rizal’s parents
- 18. A student who is boarding outside of Ateneo
- 19. A period of expansion for Western colonizers for Spain and Portugal that produced the likes of Christopher Columbus, Vasco de Gama, Bartholomew Diaz, and Ferdinand Magellan in quest of gold, evangelization and power.
- 20. This is from a Latin word “ricial” meaning “rice field”.
- 21. She died at the age of three due to illness and also Rizal’s first sadness.
- 22. A native house whose roof was made if thatched cogon grass and bamboo wall, where the children played.
- 24. This is the former name of Ateneo
- 26. the rule of the friars or the clergy.
- 27. Refers to payment exacted by anyone to be exempted from work
- 28. A renowned teacher adept in Latin and Spanish grammar who punished Rizal and made him take his studies seriously
- 30. Father of Jose Rizal.
- 33. Mother of Jose Rizal and also his first teachers.
- 36. Rizal has proven his outstanding academic ability by receiving excellent grades throughout his study in Ateneo, his excellent grades were also called ___ in Spanish.
- 38. He was the family caretaker of the Rizals
- 40. Rizal’s painting partner in class
- 44. an athlete who instructed Rizal the rudiments of fencing and wrestling and Rizal’s uncle who taught him how to be physically fit.
- 45. A European intellectual movement of the 17th and 18th centuries in which ideas concerning God, reason, nature and humanity were synthesized into a worldview that gained wide assent in the West and that instigated revolutionary developments in art, philosophy and politics.
- 47. This name came from St. Protacio because Rizal’s has the same birthday as the saint.
- 48. The first person who Rizal has brawl with
- 49. This is where Rizal reminded of the beautiful sights of Calamba Laguna as he first traveled to Madrid
- 50. Rizal’s uncle who love books and a writer, would instill in him a passion for writing and an appreciation to poetry and literature
Down
- 1. Republic act no.1425
- 2. The president when the Rizal Bill was signed into law.
- 3. head of the town.
- 4. The 4th best in ranks in each empires.
- 5. educated middle class.
- 8. The first profession of Rizal in Ateneo.
- 9. a system of landholding wherein individuals loyal to Spain were grnated land as trustees.
- 11. The age of Rizal when he wrote a Tagalog poem “Sa Aking Mga Kabata”
- 12. A horse-drawn carriage.
- 13. The bill specified that only college/university student would have the option to to read this kind of versions of clericallg-contested reading material, such as Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo.
- 17. Josefa’s nickname.
- 23. Tax imposed on every individual or family to pay the colonial goveenment as a symbol of vassalage to Spain.
- 25. A social class that refers to the ruling and usually educated upper class in the Spanish Philippines. An example is Rizal’s family
- 29. They continued to oppose the bill mandating the reading of Rizal’s novels Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo claiming it would.
- 31. Has the blue flag and refers to externos or non-boarders
- 32. The fourth child of Rizal Mercado Family who married Silvestre Ubaldo, dies in 1887 from childbirth
- 34. The third child of Francisco and Teodora who married Antonio Lopez, a school teacher of Morong.
- 35. This is the province of Rizal’s Father.
- 37. At the age of ___ Rizal learned the alphabet from his mother
- 39. Rizal’s grandfather and was a mayor of Biñan
- 40. The seventh child in the family of Mercado.
- 41. Rizal’s uncle who taught him sketching and drawing through the use of a pencil or charcoal
- 42. The piece of wood Rizal used in carving the image of The Virgin Mary.
- 43. Jose Rizal’s nickname.
- 46. An unmarried woman who is older than what is perceived as the prime age range during which women usually marry. An example is Trinidad and Josefa.