Isaac J Pardo

For other people with similar names, see Isaac Pardo or Isaac Díaz Pardo.
Isaac José Pardo
Born (1905-10-14)14 October 1905
Caracas, Venezuela
Died 3 March 2000(2000-03-03) (aged 94)
Caracas, Venezuela
Occupation Historian, physician
Nationality Venezuelan Venezuela
Genre History, essay
Subject History of Venezuela
Notable awards National Prize for Literature of Venezuela
1984

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Isaac José Pardo Soublette (Caracas, 14 October 1905 - 3 March 2000), was a Venezuelan intellectual of German-Jewish extraction known for his essays: Esta tierra de gracia (1955) and Fuegos bajo el agua. La invención de la utopía (1983).

Also, was part of the Generation of 1928, movement against the dictatorship of Juan Vicente Gómez; founder of the party Unión Republicana Democrática (URD) in 1945, director of El Nacional, redactor of the humorist paper El Morrocoy Azul, and principal authority of the Supreme Electoral Council of Venezuela in 1963.

As physician, worked along with José Ignacio Baldó in the hospital of El Algodonal, facing the battle against tuberculosis in the zone.

Pardo won the National Prize for Literature in 1984. In 1999 received the Order of the Liberator and an honorary degree from the Simón Bolívar University.[1]

The library of the CELARG, was named after him.[2]

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