Background
Antero Soriano was born in Tanza, province of Cavite to Adriano Soriano and Aurea Sosa on January 3, 1886.
Antero Soriano was born in Tanza, province of Cavite to Adriano Soriano and Aurea Sosa on January 3, 1886.
He was educated in Liceo de Manila, graduating and receiving his degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1904.He studied law in the famous Escuela de Derecho,Manila, until September,1907,when he presented himself for examination with one hundred other students before an examining tribunal nominated by the Supreme Court of the Philippines.
Only five applicants passed and Antero was one of them. He started practicing law immediately. In June 1912, Soriano, then was 26 years old, was elected governor of the province of Cavite.
In 1916 he was re-elected.
In 1919 he was elected senator of the fifth district for the term of six years. On December 5, 1907, Antero Soriano married Gerarda Aquino with whom he had three children, Arturo, Julia and Josefina.
He was widowed On July 12, 1914. The Soriano family studied mostly in prestigious schools in the Philippines.
Adrian Cristobal Junior. a graduate of the Ateneo Law School, was appointed by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to be the Director-General of Intellectual Property (Intellectual Property) Office Philippines.
Antero Soriano died of appendicitis on June 15, 1929 at the age of forty-one.
His granddaughter, Teresita Soriano, a graduate of Saint Theresa"s College of Manila and former nursing student at the University of the Philippines(Uttar Pradesh), married the late Adrian East. Cristobal Senior, political satirist, essayist, columnist, fictionist, playwright, literary organizer, popular historian of Andres Bonifacio, and Marcos government functionary, adviser, and famous journalist. Meanwhile, his great-granddaughter, Celina Soriano Cristoba, also of Saint Theresa"s College of Manila and a graduate of United Presbyterian Diliman is a writer and was publisher-editor of The Review Magazine and Lifestyle page editor of the for Manila Chronicle. His great-grandson, Attorney
He was chairman of the Committee on the Manila Railroad, chairman of the special committee on distribution of public work funds, and a member of the Senate committee on Agricultural and Natural Resources. He is also a member of a special committee appointed to investigate the alleged "land trust" in the Philippines. He was appointed member of the Philippine Parliamentary Mission, and upon arrival in the United States, was made Chairman of a committee to investigate the Philippine Press Bureau at Washington, and recommended its continuance.