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・ Abraham Khashmanyan
・ Abraham Kidane
・ Abraham Kidunaia
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Abraham González (governor)
・ Abraham González Casanova
・ Abraham González International Airport
・ Abraham González Uyeda
・ Abraham Gorlaeus
・ Abraham Gotthelf Kästner
・ Abraham Gottlob Werner
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Abraham González (governor) : ウィキペディア英語版
Abraham González (governor)

Abraham González Casavantes (June 7, 1864 – March 7, 1913) was the provisional and constitutional governor of the Mexican state of Chihuahua during the early period of the Mexican Revolution. He was the political mentor to the revolutionary Pancho Villa, whom he had met and befriended before the revolution.
==Family==
González was born on his family's estates in Basúchil, in Guerrero Municipality, Chihuahua.〔de Martinez, Irene Brandtner y Nava (2008) "Chihuahua Governor Abraham González, a Descendant of New Mexicans" ''La Herencia'' 58: p. 34〕 He was a member of one of the richest and best-educated families in the state〔Staff (7 March 2008) ("XCV Aniversario Luctuoso de Abraham González" ) ''El Ágora'', in Spanish〕 (the González family was believed to be descended from European nobility). He was educated at the University of Notre Dame, in Notre Dame, Indiana. His paternal line is from Teocaltiche, Jalisco belonging to the González de Hermosillo y Gómez Rendón family 〔("Abraham González Casavantes" ) Sanchiz (IIH-UNAM) + Gayol (CEH-ColMich)〕 with Y-DNA matches with other González de Hermosillo families of Jalisco. 〔("Nueva Galicia DNA project" ) 〕
As with Francisco Madero, the scion of one of the richest landowning families in Coahuila and also educated abroad, Abraham González had suffered under the favoritism of Porfirio Díaz's political system. In Chihuahua, the dominant political clique was the Terrazas-Creel family, which had vast land holdings and strong political connections to Díaz. González "was unable to hold out against the competition of the large haciendas, primarily those belonging to the Terrazas-Creel clan."〔Friedrich Katz, ''The Secret War in Mexico''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1981, p. 37.〕 After Madero wrote his book, ''The Presidential Succession of 1910'' and the political movement of elites against Díaz's election grew, González became the head of the Anti-Re-electionist Club in Chihuahua.〔Katz, ''The Secret War in Mexico'', p. 37.〕

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