Spotlight
Renato Constantino
The historian Renato Constantino passed away 26 years ago on 15 September, the very birthday of his son, RC, who designed the iconic cover[READ]
MIBF 2025 — Day 3!
The Constantino Foundation continues at the Manila International Book Fair with our history titles, including the 50th anniversary edition of The Philippines: A Past Revisited[READ]
History in the Spotlight: Constantino Foundation at MIBF 2025
Exciting news! Constantino Foundation history books, including the new 50th anniversary edition of The Philippines: A Past Revisited, with a new intro and layout,[READ]
Pasts Revisited
Renato Constantino saw early how central ecological consciousness was in realizing durable development
Stories
Letizia Constantino, her letters, and her grandson – Philippine Daily Inquirer
"An invitation from Renato Redentor “Red” Constantino to view the exhibit “Letizia: A Life in Letters” slipped into my DM shortly before Holy Week. (Red and I were classmates at Jose Abad Santos Memorial School or JASMS, which used to occupy a wide stretch of land along Edsa.) The exhibit celebrates[READ]
Poets and scholars visit exhibit!
What a magical day it was to receive four fine women, all of them luminaries in their respective fields, three of them Constantino Foundation partners, thanks to the IYAS and one who was a close personal friend of Letizia Roxas Constantino, and, in her words, a proud student of Renato Constantino.[READ]
Discover the story of Letizia Roxas Constantino in this moving feature by Rolling Stone Philippines
This Exhibition Brings A Hidden Figure Into The National Spotlight From April 9 to May 30, the retrospective “Letizia: A Life in Letters” will be open to the public and will spotlight the life and writings of the esteemed but humble historian and nationalist By Mel Wang | April 10,[READ]
A visit from the royalty of good causes
A visit from the royalty of good causes: Three generations of fine Filipinas dropped by to see the Letizia: A Life in Letters exhibit. It was a pleasure to guide Teresita Ang See, her daughter Meah, and Meah's daughter, Mayim, around the Constantino Foundation's Linangan Gallery. Tessy, as the academic and[READ]




















