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Topic: Isabel Peron


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  Isabel Martínez de Perón - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Perón was attracted to her beauty and believed she could provide him with the female companionship he had been lacking since the death of his second wife, Evita.
Isabel had very little in the way of political experience or ambitions, and she was a very different personality from Evita, who had been denied the post of vice president years earlier.
Isabel agreed to fire López, but the military concluded that with Argentina's prevailing climate of widespread strikes and political terrorism, a weak-willed and inexperienced woman would not be a suitable president.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Isabel_Peron   (468 words)

  
 Juan Perón - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Perón also pushed hard to industrialize the country; in 1947 he announced the first five-year plan to boost newly nationalized industries.
His ideology would be dubbed peronism and became a central influence in Argentine political parties.
Perón died on July 1, 1974 with the problems unresolved and was succeeded by Isabel.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Juan_Peron   (889 words)

  
 Peron, Juan Domingo. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
Cámpora resigned in July, and the following September Perón was elected president by 62% of the vote; his second wife, Isabel Martínez de Perón, whom he had married in 1961, was elected vice president though she was widely resented by those devoted to the late Eva Perón.
Isabel Perón was unable to command the support of any powerful group, not even organized labor.
In 1990, the Peronist candidate Carlos Saúl Menem won the presidential elections, demonstrating the continued appeal of Peronism in Argentina.
www.bartleby.com /65/pe/Peron-Ju.html   (536 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Isabel Peron
Perón, Isabel de, née María Estela Martínez (1931- ), president of Argentina (1974-1976), born in La Rioja.
Argentina : government and politics: Isabel Perón, decline of her government
This was a year of nearly continuous political crisis, violent social unrest, and economic decline in Argentina as the leadership vacuum created by the death of President Juan Domingo Perón in mid-1974 remained unfilled.
ca.encarta.msn.com /Isabel_Peron.html   (168 words)

  
 The Consortium
Peron's arrival was welcomed by millions of Argentines from the political left as well as the right, by Argentines who remembered his populist social programs -- and those who shared his darker fascination with European fascism.
Peron participated in the GOU's destabilization of the sitting Argentine government, a challenge that culminated in a military coup in 1943.
Peron's political grip loosened further when Eva was stricken with cancer and died in 1952.
www.consortiumnews.com /1999/111299a.html   (3857 words)

  
 The Trivialist Archives
Juan Domingo Peron was elected to the presidency of Argentina in 1946.
Isabel Peron failed to achieve the popularity of Peron's second wife, Eva, and in 1976, she was placed under house arrest following another military coup.
Isabel Peron was the first woman president of the Americas, and, for that matter, of the world.
members.aol.com /frodob42/TDT9903.html   (4823 words)

  
 BBC ON THIS DAY | 29 | 1974: First female president for Argentina
In a state broadcast, Mrs Peron said her husband was "conscious that his state of health prevents him from directly attending to government affairs until his recovery".
Mrs Peron, known to the Argentine public as 'Isabelita', is Juan Peron's third wife and became vice-president after his return to power in September 1973.
Isabel Peron's presidency lasted until 1976 when she was deposed by a military junta led by Jorge Rafael Videla.
news.bbc.co.uk /onthisday/hi/dates/stories/june/29/newsid_2857000/2857121.stm   (342 words)

  
 Perón, Juan Domingo -> Second Presidency on Encyclopedia.com 2002   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Juan and Eva Peron are still a powerful political presence in Argentina.(Originated from The Orange County Register)
With a portrait of General Juan Domingo Peron at the right, presidential candidate Carlos Menem speaks during a campaign meeting at the Luna Park stadium in Buenos Aires, April 15, 2003.
REPUBLIC OF ARGENTINA: Buenos Aires:rgentinian graffiti: Che Guevara and Evita Peron.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/section/peron-ju_secondpresidency.asp   (750 words)

  
 Peron's second presidency (from Argentina) --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Perón was elected president with his third wife, María Estela Martínez de Perón (Isabel Perón), as vice president.
Taking office in October 1973, he continued the campaign against the left, and in May 1974 the victims of the purge acknowledged the break with their former leader and passed into (still legal) opposition.
More results on "Peron's second presidency (from Argentina)" when you join.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-33091?tocId=33091   (861 words)

  
 29 Jun History: This Date
President Isabel Perón, a former dancer and Perón's third wife, is the Western Hemisphere's first female head of government.
Two days later, Juan dies from heart disease, and Isabel is left alone as leader of a nation suffering from serious economic and political strife.
Isabel de Perón was imprisoned for five years on a charge of abuse of property, and upon her release in 1981 settled in Madrid
www.geocities.com /hills4526/history/h4jun/h4jun29.html   (8098 words)

  
 Musicals on History: Stage A to F
Eva's foundation provided the Peron's and their cohorts with millions in graft, but it also built hospitals and schools and provided desperately needed services for the poor.
Peron returned in triumph in the 1970s, with his new wife Isabel as vice president – the job once denied to Eva.
Isabel Peron was deposed before plans for a new tomb could be executed.
www.musicals101.com /histst1.htm   (1071 words)

  
 Juan Peron - U.S. Politics Online: A Political Discussion Forum
Juan Peron was an Argentinian president who was a dictator who Fascist tendencies from 1946-1955 and 1972-1974, when he died.
Juan Peron got his idea of Fascism when in Italy, when he was stationed there in the 1930s and liked the system.
Juan Peron was a dictator and called for separation of church and state, which got him overthrown after the military told him to either step down or face a civil war.
www.uspoliticsonline.com /forums/showthread.php?t=6973   (532 words)

  
 Perón, Juan Domingo
He fled to Paraguay and, in 1960, to Spain.
He returned from exile to the presidency in 1973, but died in office in 1974, and was succeeded by his third wife, Isabel Perón.
He was instrumental in initiating long-lasting changes in the national political arena, and today Peronism remains a powerful political force.
www.tiscali.co.uk /reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0012339.html   (263 words)

  
 Montoneros   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The Montoneros claimed the "social revolutionary vision of authentic Peronism" and started terrorist operations against the government.
In government the army quickly took power; Isabel Perón, the new Argentinean president, was essentially a figurehead.
In March 1976, she was ousted and a military junta installed, led by General Jorge Rafael Videla.
www.yotor.com /wiki/en/mo/Montoneros.htm   (610 words)

  
 Peron
Peron's Argentina: reasons for rise to power, policies, fall from office.
1974: First female president for Argentina BBC article from "On this Day" series, on the day Maria Estela Isabel Martinez de Peron was sworn in as interim leader of the Argentine Republic.
Estella Frias, from Argentina, talks of her childhood during the Peron regime: "We were all brought up to hate and fear the Perons" (BBC Woman's Hour, 1978)
www.casahistoria.net /peron.htm   (1335 words)

  
 DNA & Human Rights | Reports | Argentina2
On March 24, 1976, a military coup toppled President Maria Estela "Isabel" Martinez de Peron.
During her abbreviated two-year term, Isabel Peron had waged a gloves-off campaign against two highly-organized urban guerilla movements, the Montoneros and the Trotskyist Ejercito Revolucionario del Pueblo.
According to one newspaper, during the last month of Isabel Peron's tenure, there was a bomb attack every three hours and a political killing every five.
www.hrcberkeley.org /dna/argentina02.html   (285 words)

  
 The Legend of Evita, an Omnibus Review
Evita, whose body had been embalmed upon her death, hidden in a European graveyard and exhumed for repatriation, is now a corpse and ghost in his house.
His third wife, Isabel Martínez Perón, speaks and dresses like Evita and dreams of becoming one with her, by possession if necessary, so she can replace the first lady who nearly became vice president of Argentina.
He fled to Europe via Paraguay, meeting and marrying Isabel, who at one point was given the macabre task of caring for Eva's embalmed corpse.
www.greenmanreview.com /book/book_evita_omni.html   (2882 words)

  
 Argentina's Dirty War - RC Groups
Juan Peron was driven out in part because he called for separation of church and state, which resulted in church fires and the economy had weaken and inflation was high.
While president, Juan Peron dies of a heart attack and his wife, Isabel Peron is now president.
However, Isabel Peron is kicked out of power by the military in 1976, because she could not stop the polarization of left and right extremists and terrorism.
www.rcgroups.com /forums/showthread.php?t=167098   (2008 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The military stood by and watched the Isabel Peron government disintegrate in the face of growing social pressure, knowing that they would be required to step in to restore order.
Through a bloodless coup, in March of 1976, the military stepped to the forefront and assumed control in the name of order.30 In a 1979 study on socio-political fear in Argentina the reasons for the acceptance and even desire by some for a military coup and, to a degree, the repression that came with it.
They were carried out as a counter insurgency doctrine under the principles of national security outlined in the NSD and as a complement to the regime's economic doctrine, which had to keep labor unrest quelled to attract investment and carry out their other economic programs.
www.is.rhodes.edu /modus/95/Githens.html   (4158 words)

  
 Malvinas or Falkland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Isabel, won the election with 62% of the vote
She faced tremendous problems: economy got out of control; lost support of the labor movement; political violence increased; Peronist party was divided; guerrillas launched provocative attacks, right-wing extremists organized the AAA (Argentine Anti-Communist Alliance)
Several military officers were indicted and sentenced to prison terms.
darkwing.uoregon.edu /~caguirre/399_12.html   (646 words)

  
 WHKMLA : History of Argentina, 1972-1983
General JUAN PERON was pardoned; age 77, he returned from Spanish exile and won the 1973 elections, appointing his wife Isabel vice president.
Peron died in 1974, succeeded by his wife Isabel.
Episodic unrest among the students, which had peaked in the occupations of the city of Cordoba by the latter in 1969 and 1971, were blamed on communism, partially foreign-influenced (charismatic communist rebel ERNESTO CHE GUEVARA had been born in Argentina).
www.zum.de /whkmla/region/samerica/argentina19721983.html   (944 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Search View - Juan Peron
To find a specific word, name, or topic in this article, select the option in your Web browser for finding within the page.
Throughout 18 years of exile, however, Perón retained his labor support and influence in Argentine politics.
He was finally allowed to return to Argentina in 1973 and was again elected president, with his third wife, Isabel de Perón, as vice president.
encarta.msn.com /text_761571996__1/Juan_Peron.html   (537 words)

  
 The Gulf Herald - Pensacola's Finest Online Newspaper - FREE Classifieds, Pensacola Real Estate, and more!   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Peron's vision of self-sufficiency for his country won wide support from the Argentine people, but over the next decade he became increasingly authoritarian, jailing political opponents, restricting freedom of the press, and organizing trade unions into militant groups along Fascist lines.
President Isabel Peron was unable to command the support of any powerful group, let alone construct a necessary coalition, and the political and economic situation in Argentina worsened.
Isabel Peron was imprisoned for five years on a charge of abuse of property, and upon her release in 1981 settled in Madrid.
www.gulfherald.com /news/article.asp?newsid=1011   (2410 words)

  
 Learn Spanish the way Diplomats do
The [in]famous Argentine dictator Juan Perón, met Isabel Martínez when he was in exile in Panama in 1955.
He insisted that Isabel be his running mate, and she was duly elected vice president.
She was deposed and put under house arrest by the military in 1976, and shortly thereafter the "dirty war" started.
www.platiquemos-letstalk.com /About/HomePageQandA.htm   (440 words)

  
 Bulletin - Argentina's fiasco   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
And on that occasion, the chief of state was Isabel Martinez de Peron, the widow of Gen. Juan Domingo Peron, who had been freshly toppled by the military coup that would usher in the disappearances and atrocities of the Dirty War era.
The decline and fall of Fernando de la Rua came as swiftly as that of Isabel Peron, but on this occasion the nation’s armed forces played no role in the ouster.
The catalyst instead was the smoldering rage of millions of Argentines who could no longer stomach a full-blown economic depression and the harsh austerity measures that de la Rua and his cabinet had prescribed for the country.
bulletin.ninemsn.com.au /bulletin/eddesk.nsf/printing/92ACEAB57DDDE39BCA256B3B00018D07   (1273 words)

  
 MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base
Upon Peron's return to Argentina in 1973, the Montoneros grew impatient as Peron increasingly sided with the more rightist elements of the Peronist movement.
The tension between the ideologically opposed elements of Peron's supporters erupted on June 20, 1973, the scheduled date for Peron's triumphant homecoming ceremony.
Following Juan Peron's death in July 1974, his third wife and vice-president Isabel Martinez de Peron took over the Argentine presidency.
www.tkb.org /Group.jsp?groupID=236   (473 words)

  
 Juan Peron and the Montoneros - Stormfront White Nationalist Community   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
It seems Peron supported them in the years 1955-1973 because he wanted to get back in power, but turned around in 1973-1974 because he wanted a compomise with the Argentine establishment.
However Peron himself was strongly nationalistic, pretty much a national socialist, although he was not openly anti-semitic.
Basically, Peron's ideology was to get power and keep it, he was a national socialist, but not a white nationalist.
www.stormfront.org /forum/showthread.php?t=154065   (1588 words)

  
 Isabel Martinez de Peron Biography / Biography of Isabel Martinez de Peron Main Biography
Isabel Martinez de Perón (born 1931) became the first female president in Latin America when she assumed the Argentine presidency upon the death of her husband, Juan Perón.
Isabel Perón was born María Estela Martinez Cartas on February 4, 1931, in La Rioja, a provincial capital in the impoverished mountainous region of northwestern Argentina.
Each Biography is written by a biographical expert or professional educator and is a complete resource on the individual.
www.bookrags.com /biography-isabel-martinez-de-peron   (252 words)

  
 Peron's legacy (from Argentina) --  Encyclopædia Britannica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
When Perón died on July 1, 1974, he left to his widow a deeply compromised inheritance, yet the transition of power was smooth, and Isabel Perón was sworn in as the world's first woman president.
More results on "Peron's legacy (from Argentina)" when you join.
More from Britannica on "Peron's legacy (from Argentina)"...
www.britannica.com /eb/article-33092?tocId=33092   (799 words)

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