Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Isabel met José López Rega, who was a former policeman with an interest in occultism and fortune-telling, during a visit to Argentina in 1965. [18] She was interested in occult matters (and as president reportedly employed astrological divination to determine national policy), [ 19 ] so the two quickly became friends.
Perón's third wife, María Estela Martínez, known as Isabel Perón, was elected as vice president on his ticket and succeeded him as president upon his death in 1974. Political violence only intensified, and she was ousted in 1976 , followed by a period of even deadlier repression under the junta of Jorge Rafael Videla .
Two presidential children, John Quincy Adams and George W. Bush, have become president in their own right. John Scott Harrison is the only person to be both a child of a U.S. president and a parent of another U.S. president, being a son of William Henry Harrison and the father of Benjamin Harrison .
Asunción_de_Juan_Domingo_Perón_e_Isabel_Perón,_1973.png (400 × 447 pixels, file size: 264 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
President Perón or Presidente Perón may refer to: Juan Perón , president of Argentina from 1946 to 1955 and 1973 to 1974 Isabel Perón , president of Argentina from 1974 to 1976
Later in his life, during his many years as president of Argentina, Perón rarely mentioned his first marriage, as his second and third wives, Eva and Isabel, loomed larger. Tizón is generally lesser-known among Argentines, in part because during the years of their marriage Juan Perón was not yet a national figure.
Isabel Perón (born 1931), former Argentine Vice President and President; Jean-Hervé Péron (born 1949), frontman and bass player of several incarnations of German band "Faust" Juan Perón (1895–1974), former President of Argentina and founder of the Justicialist Party; François Péron (1775–1810), French naturalist and explorer
His vice president and third wife, Isabel Perón, succeeded him, but she proved to be a weak, ineffectual ruler. A number of revolutionary organizations—chief among them Montoneros , a group of far-left Peronists—escalated their wave of political violence (including kidnappings and bombings ) against the campaign of harsh repressive and ...