Allende family
The Allende family is a Chilean family of Spanish descent. They became well known during the 19th century and are based in Valparaíso. They have played a very significant role in Chilean politics.
Prominent members
- Ramón Allende Padín (1845–1884), physician and politician, chief of the Chilean Army Medical Corps during the War of the Pacific (1879–1884)
- Salvador Allende (1908–1973), President of Chile (1970–1973)
- Laura Allende (1911–1981), politician, sister of Salvador Allende
- Hortensia Bussi (1914–2009), First Lady of Chile, widow of Salvador Allende
- Denise Pascal Allende (born 1940), politician, niece of Salvador Allende
- Isabel Allende (born 1942), writer; daughter of Tomás Allende, a diplomatic official, and Francisca Llona Barros; first cousin once removed of Salvador Allende
- Andrés Pascal Allende (born 1943), revolutionary, nephew of Salvador Allende
- Beatriz Allende (1943–1977), revolutionary, daughter of Salvador Allende
- Isabel Allende (aka Isabel Allende Bussi, born 1945), politician, daughter of Salvador Allende
- Juan Allende, associate professor of Political Science at Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Georgia
- Paula Frías Allende (1963–1992), daughter of writer Isabel Allende
gollark: Or, to avoid any weird brain weirdness, a dual-core computer or something, which we know are designed to deterministic.
gollark: Assuming no weirdness, if you run a highly advanced physics simulator on a Turing machine and load in a brain, said brain will "multitask".
gollark: Multitasking isn't relevant to what it can compute.
gollark: i.e. not really, but close enough that it can do the same stuff.
gollark: A TM can multitask just like a single-core computer can.
External links
- Family information from official Salvador Allende site (in Spanish)
- Extensive family tree (in Spanish)
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