Francisco Dagohoy led a 85-year nativist uprising against Spanish rule in Bohol, Philippines from 1744 to 1829. Dagohoy was triggered to rebel after a Jesuit priest refused to give his brother a Christian burial. He started with 3,000 followers that grew to 20,000. Dagohoy established a free government in the mountains with his headquarters in a cave system in Danao. Twenty Spanish governors failed to stop the rebellion before Captain Manuel Sanz finally subdued Dagohoy's forces in 1828 when he was 101 years old. Dagohoy's rebellion is remembered as one of the longest anti-colonial revolts in Philippine history.