Ferdinand Marcos Net Worth


Ferdinand Marcos Net Worth

Ferdinand Marcos net worth is
$300,000

Ferdinand Marcos Wiki: Salary, Married, Wedding, Spouse, Family

Ferdinand Emmanuel Edralin Marcos, Sr. (September 11, 1917 – September 28, 1989) was a Filipino lawyer and politician who served as President of the Philippines from 1965 to 1986. He ruled under martial law in 1972 to control the threat of the New People's Army until 1981. In 1983, his government was accused by some of being involved in the assassination of Ninoy Aquino. Public outrage led to the snap elections of 1986 and to the making of so called People Power Revolution in February 1986.Prior to the presidency, he served as a member of the Philippine House of Representatives from 1949 to 1959 and of the Philippine Senate from 1959 to 1965, where he was Senate President from 1963 to 1965.While in power he implemented wide-ranging programs of infrastructure development and economic reform.His wife was Imelda Marcos, who became famous in her own right, and who is still active in Philippine politics along with two of his three children, Imee Marcos and Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos, Jr.. 
Full NameFerdinand Marcos
Net Worth$300,000
Date Of BirthSeptember 11, 1917
DiedSeptember 28, 1989, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Place Of BirthSarrat, Ilocos Norte, Philippines
Height5' 7" (1.7 m)
ProfessionPolitician, Jurist
Work PositionMember of the House of Representatives from Ilocos Norte's 2nd
EducationUniversity of the Philippines College of Law
ReligionRoman Catholicism, formerly Iglesia Filipina Independiente
NationalityPhilippine
SpouseImelda Marcos
ChildrenBongbong Marcos, Imee Marcos, Irene Marcos, Aimee Marcos
ParentsJosefa Edralin, Mariano Marcos
SiblingsFortuna Marcos-Barba, Pacifico Marcos, Elizabeth Marcos-Keon
NicknamesFerdinand E. Marcos, Marcos, Ferdinand Edralín, Ferdinand Edralín Marcos
IMDB
Star SignVirgo
#Quote
1Nobody is impervious to misfortune.
2Once a champion, always a champion.
3Leadership is the other side of the coin of loneliness, and he who is a leader must always act alone. And acting alone, accept everything alone.
4There are many things we do not want about the world. Let us not just mourn them. Let us change them.
5I do not care how brave a president is; I do not care how many medals he may wear. I do not care how well trained his guards may be. If he violates the will of the people, he shall be eliminated.
6I can understand the Cultural Revolution of Mao Tse-tung.
7America must realize, there are conditions she must accept in Asia. The first is a diversity of Asian cultures, governments, economic and political systems; the second, that to run against the tide of Asian nationalism is worse than impractical - it is also highly dangerous.
8The U.S. State Department has a consistent record of error in the assessment of Asian situations and judging Red Chinese intentions.
9Little boys have amazing minds.
10What we ask of the developed countries is to let the Third World find a third way.
11The challenge to Asia is to discard the dry, meatless bone of mysticism and fatalism.
12Freedom is not just declared; it is exercised.
13The challenge to America is to extend to Asia the defensive shield of American power in forms consonant with Asian freedom and self-respect.
14History should not be left to the historians. Rather, be like Churchill. Make history, and then write it.
15The permissiveness of society must be balanced with authoritativeness.
16Filipinos are not worse than any other colonized people except that our colonization was a little longer, and the independence movement was always dictated in political terms, never in social ones. We borrowed terms, but we didn't understand them.
17I was deposed by a coup d'etat, by friends that I trusted and aided by the American Government.
18I often wonder what I will be remembered in history for. Scholar? Military hero? Builder?
#Fact
1Father of Ferdinand Marcos Jr..
2A soldier in the Philippine Army during World War II, he was captured by the Japanese during their invasion of the Philippines and survived the infamous Bataan Death March.
3A former general in the Philippine Army, he later ruled the Philippines for many years.

Writer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Maharlika1970uncredited

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Imelda2003DocumentaryHimself (uncredited)
Panorama1987TV Series documentaryHimself
Der lachende Stern1983Documentary Himself
HBO Boxing1975TV Series documentaryHimself

Archive Footage

Known for movies

(Himself)

Der lachende Stern (1983)
as (Himself)

Writer

Maharlika (1970)
as Writer

Himself

Imelda (2003)
as Himself

Himself

HBO Boxing (1975)
as Himself

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