Jacqueline van Rysselberghe

Jacqueline van Rysselberghe in 2014.

Jacqueline van Rysselberghe Herrera (born February 3, 1965 in Chile) is a Chilean politician and psychiatrist who graduated from the University of Concepción. She was mayor of Concepción from 2000 until her resignation in March 2010 to take the office of Indendant of the Biobío Region. Previously, she had been a city council member since 1992.[1] On 3 April 2011 she resigned as Intendant.[2] She was elected to the Senate of Chile in the 2013 general election.[3]

Van Rysselberghe is a member of the right-wing party Independent Democratic Union where she is one of the five leaders (alongside Hernan Larrain, Evelyn Matthei, Pablo Longueira and Jose Antonio Kast), a position she also held during the period 2004-2006.

Family

Her surname comes from Flanders, Belgium.[4] Her grandfather was François van Rysselberghe. Her great grandfather was Max van Rysselberghe, an engineer who left Belgium when he was about 20 years old on a what was originally planned to be a six-month-long scientific expedition to Antarctica. The expedition lasted two years. Reports of her connection to the Pierre Van Rysselberghe dynasty are, at this point, unverified. During the first year, plans to return to Europe were abandoned when the ice in the waterways failed to thaw during the summer. In Belgium, Max met Isabel Martin, the daughter of Valentin Martin, Chilean Minister of Public Works, who at that time had escaped to Belgium after the coup in Chile. Max and Isabel were married in Europe, and in 1905 left for Chile. This couple had four children, Lydia, Yvonne, Henry, the grandfather of Jacqueline and Daniel.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Dettwiler Rodríguez, Gretel (2008-01-17). "De la antártica al municipio penquista - Los Van Rysselberghe, belgas dignos de novela de aventuras". El Sur (in Spanish) (Concepción). Retrieved 2013-04-24.
  2. "Van Rysselberghe renuncia a la Intendencia del Biobío y frenaría acusación constitucional" (in Spanish). Emol. 3 April 2011. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  3. "Reseña Biográfica Parlamentaria Jacqueline Van Rysselberghe Herrera" (in Spanish). Historia Política Legislativa del Congreso Nacional de Chile. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  4. Revista Cosas Jacqueline van Rysselberghe: "Si la política invade a mi familia, la dejo" por André Jouffé


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