Epifanio de los Santos
Historian and Scholar
(1871 - 1928)
The famous highway named after him was just the acronym EDSA for most Filipinos but little did they know that this great man is an intellectual and patriotic the level and contemporary of Jose Rizal.
Epifanio de los Santos y Cristóbal, sometimes referred to as Don Pañong or Don Panyong, was a prominent civil servant, journalist, and historian from the Philippines. He was a prominent civil servant, journalist, and historian from the Philippines. In addition, he practiced law, was a philosopher, a bibliophile, a biographer, a painter, a poet, a musician, a literary critic, a librarian, and an antique collector. Some people considered him to be among the greatest Filipino authors of his era.
He also got involved in politics, representing Nueva Ecija as a member of the Malolos Congress from 1898 to 1899 and then as governor of Nueva Ecija from 1902 to 1906. In 1900, he was appointed district attorney of San Isidro, Nueva Ecija, and subsequently served as fiscal of Bataan and Bulacan provinces. He was appointed in 1918 as the Philippine Census's assistant technical director. In 1925, Governor General Leonard Wood named him Director of the Philippine Library and Museum, a position he held until his passing in 1928.
Childhood and Matrimony
On April 7, 1871, Epifanio de los Santos was born in Potrero, Malabon, Manila Province, to Escolastico de los Santos of Nueva Ecija and pianist Antonina Cristóbal y Tongco, who was well-known for her harp and piano skills. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the Ateneo Municipal de Manila. Although he spent some time painting, music eventually became a part of his everyday life, and he was even given a professorship in the field. After completing his legal education at the University of Santo Tomas, he took the bar exam in 1898. He worked as a private secretary to a high-ranking Spanish official after graduating, a role that was somewhat like to that of a solicitor-general.
When he committed himself to collecting plants and flowers in Nueva Ecija during his college years, Rafael Palma (1930) observed that his collecting instinct was already apparent. He also sought out and spent time with rural communities during this period. "Nobody suspected that he would someday become a literary man" is how Agoncillo puts it. He became interested in Spanish literature as a young law student after reading "Pepita Jimenez" by Juan Valera and other available works. Later, after meeting Valera in Spain, he became friends with him.
Leticia, Fernando, Socrates, Federico, Hipatia Patria, Espacia Lydia, Glicera Ruth, and Margarita were the eight children Epifanio had with his second wife, Margarita Torralba of Malolos, while his first wife, Doña Ursula Paez of Malabon, gave birth to four children: Jose, Rosario, Escolastico, and Antonio. Jose, his first wife's son, went on to become a collector, historian, and biographer. In addition to being a pianist for silent films, his brother Escolastico wrote poetry and told realist stories for Philippine newspapers and magazines. His second wife's son, Socrates, went on to become a prominent aeronautics engineer for the Pentagon.
Scholarly and Literary works
Some people regarded Epifanio as one of the greatest Filipino authors in Spanish at the time. His memberships included the Spanish Royal Academy of History, the Spanish Royal Academy of Literature, and the Spanish Royal Academy of Language in Madrid. Marcelino Menéez y Pelayo was an admirer of his writings.
Epifanio, who wrote in prose under the pen name G, was a youthful associate editor of the revolutionary newspaper "La Independencia" (1898). Solon and a Malolos Congress member as well. La Libertad, El Renaciemento, La Democracia, La Patria, and Malaysia are among the other newspapers he co-founded. Algo de Prosa (1909), Literatura Tagala (1911), El Teatro Tagala (1911), Nuestra Literatura (1913), El Proceso del Dr. José Rizal (1914), and Folklore Musical de Filipinas (1920) are some of his works. Additionally, he wrote Cuentos y paisajes Filipinos (Philippine Stories and Scenes), Filipinas para los Filipinos, Filipinos y filipinistas (Filipinos and Filipinists), and Criminality in the Philippines (1903–1908). He is a linguist in Spanish, English, French, German, and Tagalog.
Lope K. Santos, Rosa Sevilla, Hermenegildo Cruz, and Jaime C. were among the active members of Samahan ng mga Mananagalog, which was founded by Felipe Calderon in 1904. He spoke Ita, Tingian, Spanish, English, French, German, and Ibalao with ease. Florante and Laura were translated into Castilian by him. He belonged to the Academia Filipina de la Lengua Española as an honorary member.
As a scholar, he contributed to early Philippine studies in anthropology, ethnology, archaeology, linguistics, and demography. He traveled to European museums and libraries to collect rare documents and artifacts from and about the Philippines. As a statesman, De los Santos was elected governor of Nueva Ecija in 1902 and 1904. He was the first governor of the province to be democratically elected. After his term, he was appointed provincial fiscal of Bulacan and Bataan. In 1925, Governor General Leonard Wood appointed him director of the National Library and Museum.
Collections
Epifanio de los Santos made a lot of trips in quest of rare Philippine documents. Almost 200 paintings and sculptures, musical compositions, records of operas, written materials, documents and manuscripts pertaining to the revolution, and historical photographs were all part of his collection. His collection of Filipiniana was well-known. In Europe, he was recognized as a philologist and biographer of Philippine subjects.
His collection includes certain printed materials and documents that are thought to be unique. W acknowledged his collections from Rizaliana. Austin Craig, James A. Le-Roy, and E. Retana. 213 materials or documents about the Philippine Revolution and 115 printed works make up his collection. Following his passing, the Philippine Legislature paid ₱19,250.00 to acquire de los Santos's library and collection under the Philippine Clarin Act.
Other Interests
He was regarded as a talented guitarist as well.
According to one story, Antonio Luna offered his guitar to the winner of a quarrel between de los Santos and Clemente Jose Zulueta. According to reports, De los Santos won and got Luna's guitar.
Serving the Public
Up until November 1899, Epifanio de los Santos was one of three delegates from Nueva Ecija in the Malolos Congress, having been elected in September 1898. He was named San Isidro, Nueva Ecija's district attorney in 1900. Later, in 1902 and 1904, he was elected governor of Nueva Ecija, a position he held until 1906. As a result, he became Nueva Ecija's first democratically elected province governor and the leader of the Federal Party. He was chosen to represent the Saint Louis World's Fair in 1904 as a member of the Philippine Commission. Later on, he was named Bataan's and Bulacan's provincial fiscal. In 1907, he penned "Electoral Fraud and its Remedies" (Fraudes Electorales y Sus Remedios) for the Philippine Assembly. He also spent time studying Philippine literature and history. Fires at his home in San Isidro, Nueva Ecija, destroyed a portion of his collection. Agoncillo and Palma claim that politics was not his main focus. Governor General Francis Burton Harrison appointed him assistant technical director of the Philippine Census in 1918.
Following Trinidad Pardo de Tavera, de los Santos was named Director of the Philippine Library and Museum by Governor General Leonard Wood in 1925. Additionally, he became the first native-born Filipino to be elected as the third President of the Philippine Library Association (now known as the Philippine Librarians Association, Inc.). According to Gabriel Bernardo, he gave up "all his other avocations except music and bibliophile" in order to devote himself fully to his profession as director of the Philippine Library.
Death and Legacy
On April 18, 1928, de los Santos passed away while in office. The principal thoroughfare in Metro Manila, Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA), bears his name. In his honor, the National Library of the Philippines has named a number of schools, streets, a college, a hospital, a printing press, and an auditorium.
EDSA
On April 7, 1959. Highway 54 was officially renamed Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA). The name change was enacted through Republic Act No. 2140 to honor Epifanio de los Santos, a renowned Filipino scholar, historian, and jurist. The date of the law’s passage coincided with his birth anniversary.
Before becoming Highway 54, the road was known as the North-South Circumferential Road (1930s) and Avenida 19 de Junio (1946), named after Jose Rizal’s birthday.
The name was assigned by the American military after World War II. It was commonly (though mistakenly) believed to be exactly 54 kilometers long.
While it was renamed in 1959, the acronym "EDSA" only became the dominant way to refer to the highway starting in the 1970s.
He was the first well-educated and cultured Filipino to draw his fellow citizens' attention to their own notable personalities as well as to their own poetry, music, art, and literature. And he did it critically, without being overly emotional or chauvinistic. However, he had faith in his people. At one point, he said:
"We Filipinos are the most promising people in the world. We have unheard of possibilities. There never has been a people similarly situated. Here we are in the Orient, with our Oriental thoughts and sentiments, but living amidst a civilization more Western than was ever known in the East. The Philippines is the only country where East meets West. The Filipino is a true cosmopolite. From him the world may expect something new and distinctive." - Epifanio de los Santos
Sources:
CulturED Philippines - https://philippineculturaleducation.com.ph/de-los-santos-epifanio/
The Kahimyang Project -https://kahimyang.com/kauswagan/articles/1060/today-in-philippine-history-april-7-1871-epifanio-de-los-santos-was-born-in-malabon
Munting Nayon - https://muntingnayon.com/102/102441/index.php
This very long stretch important main highway in Metro Manila is popularly called EDSA beginning only in the 1970s named in honor of this great intellectual and nationalist.

