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Carrera family
Influential family in Chilean history and politics From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Carrera family from Alegría de Oria (Basque Country) became politically influential during the colonial period and played a significant role in the Chilean independence. They remained politically important throughout the 19th century.
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Genealogy
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- María Nicolasa de Valdés y de la Carrera (1733–1810), first First Lady of Chile
- Ignacio de la Carrera (1747–1819), member of Chile's first ruling junta in 1810.
The children of Ignacio de la Carrera are known in Chilean history as the Hermanos Carrera (Carrera siblings). All except Javiera were military commanders in the fight against Spanish reconquest:
- Javiera Carrera (1771–1862), "Mother" of Chile, who sewed its first flag
- Brigadier Juan José Carrera (1782–1818), independentist hero
- General José Miguel Carrera (1785–1821), independentist leader, who governed Chile during its first period of independence, the Patria Vieja.
- Colonel Luis Carrera (1791–1818), independentist hero
Other descendants also notable in their time:
- José Miguel Carrera Fontecilla (1821–1860), leader of the Chilean Civil War of 1851
- José Miguel Valdés Carrera (1837–1898), politician and several times minister
- Luis Aldunate Carrera (1842–1908) politician and several times minister
- Ignacio Carrera Pinto (1848–1882), soldier and hero of the Battle of La Concepcion during the War of the Pacific.
- Manuel Carrera Pinto (1854–1895) politician
- Federico Santa María Carrera (1845–1925) businessman and philanthropist
- María Elena Carrera Villavicencio (1929), politician
The Carrera name has disappeared by way of marriage from Chilean society, but their descendants, who number in the few hundred, are socially, politically and financially prominent.
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