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Juan De Marchi (born Giovanni de Marchi in Turin, 10 June 1866 - 1943) – surname also spelled as ''Demarchi'' – was an Italian-born anarchist, best known for his friendship and influential role in the development of Salvador Allende's political identity. In 1893, when he aged twenty-seven, De Marchi moved from Italy to Argentina, where he was involved with the Latin-American Anarchist movement that arose around the newspaper Umanità Nova, stoked by figures such as Pietro Gori and Enrico Malatesta. Later on he moved in Chile, where he worked as a shoemaker in Valparaíso. When he was about sixty-three years old, Allende was attending high school at the Liceo ''Eduardo de la Barra'' in Valparaíso. It was at that time that the adolescent Allende came into contact with De Marchi's political and intellectual ideas.〔Patricio Guzmán, ''Salvador Allende'', 2004 (film documentary).〕 As Allende once said: According to other interviewers, De Marchi had an important role in shaping Allende's ideology.〔Régis Debray, ''La via cilena: intervista con Salvador Allende'', 1971, Feltrinelli〕〔Patricio Guzmán, ''Salvator Allende - La memoria ostinata'', Feltrinelli, 2006 ISBN 88-07-74017-6〕 == Sources == http://www.elciudadano.cl/2011/09/20/41068/juan-demarchi-el-maestro-anarquista-de-allende/ 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Juan De Marchi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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