Early life Allende attended the Maisonette College, and unlike her sisters, was initially attracted to the Catholic Church and received her first communion. In 1962, at the age of 17, she began studying sociology, and joined the university's socialist brigade. Five years later she accompanied her father to the congress of the
Socialist Party in Chile. On 11 September 1973, the day of the military coup led by General
Augusto Pinochet, Allende was the last person to enter the presidential palace. After the military began to bomb the presidential palace, and the outcome was already clear, her father Salvador Allende ordered the women to leave. Salvador Allende, the first
Marxist president elected in the Americas, and sitting president at the time of the coup, died during the coup led by General Augusto Pinochet in 1973. There is contention as to whether he died by suicide or was killed. The military coup launched a 17-year dictatorship.
Exile Isabel, together with her mother and her sister Carmen Paz, was granted political asylum in
Mexico, a country that fully welcomed them and where she spent 16 years in exile before returning to Chile in 1989, during the final phase of the
military regime. During her exile she traveled around the world denouncing human rights violations, meeting with heads of state and international figures in pursuit of the restoration of democracy in Chile. Gonzalo (1965-2010) was an activist in the "No" movement leading up to the
1988 plebiscite and a founder of the
Party for Democracy. With her second husband, Romilio Tambutti, she has a daughter named Marcia (b. 1971). Other members of the
Allende family have played important roles in Chilean politics. Her niece
Maya Fernández, also a member of the Socialist Party, is
Minister of Defense under
President Gabriel Boric, since March 2022.
Gay rights activist Alejandro Fernández Allende is her nephew. ==Political career==