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Add to Calendar2025-09-22 18:00:002025-09-22 20:30:00Forging the Filipino Nation: Jose E. Marco revisited
In 1911, three baybayin manuscripts, written on bonga bark and in cuttlefish ink, were donated to the National Library of the Philippines. Historian James Alexander Robertson hailed these as the “greatest literary find ever made in the Philippine Islands…the only known manuscripts of this class…that might have been written…in 1565.”
The donor of these bark manuscripts was Jose E. Marco, a prolific forger whose career spanned half a century before he was ultimately exposed through his most elaborate deception: the fabrication of an entire corpus of unpublished works attributed to Fr. Jose Burgos. While Marco’s story is well known, it acquires renewed significance in today’s Age of Fake News and Disinformation. His case serves as a cautionary tale about the (ab)uses of history in shaping, and sometimes distorting, the Filipino nation.
This lecture will be recorded. The recording will be published after the event on the ANU Philippines Institute's website.
Agenda
6:00 – 7:00 pm: Guest lecture by Ambeth Ocampo
7:00 – 7:30 pm: Q&A
7:30 – 8:30 pm: Reception drinks and snacks
Hedley Bull Lecture Theatre 1 (ANU), 130 Garran Rd, Acton ACT 2601
ANU COLLEGE OF ASIA & THE PACIFICcap.web@anu.edu.auAustralia/Sydneypublic
@Ambeth Ocampo Photofile
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Join historian Ambeth Ocampo as he revisits the curious case of Jose E. Marco, exploring how myths, & historical imagination continue to shape the way we understand the Filipino past.
In 1911, three baybayin manuscripts, written on bonga bark and in cuttlefish ink, were donated to the National Library of the Philippines. Historian James Alexander Robertson hailed these as the “greatest literary find ever made in the Philippine Islands…the only known manuscripts of this class…that might have been written…in 1565.”
The donor of these bark manuscripts was Jose E. Marco, a prolific forger whose career spanned half a century before he was ultimately exposed through his most elaborate deception: the fabrication of an entire corpus of unpublished works attributed to Fr. Jose Burgos. While Marco’s story is well known, it acquires renewed significance in today’s Age of Fake News and Disinformation. His case serves as a cautionary tale about the (ab)uses of history in shaping, and sometimes distorting, the Filipino nation.
This lecture will be recorded. The recording will be published after the event on the ANU Philippines Institute's website.
Agenda
6:00 – 7:00 pm: Guest lecture by Ambeth Ocampo
7:00 – 7:30 pm: Q&A
7:30 – 8:30 pm: Reception drinks and snacks
Off
About the Speaker
Ambeth Ocampo
Ambeth R. Ocampois Senator Gil J. Puyat Professor of History, Ateneo de Manila University. He published 35 books and writes, 'Looking Back,' the longest running editorial page column on history for the Philippines Daily Inquirer. He served as Chairman of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, 2002-2011.
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