Stylianos Mavromichalis
Greek politician (1899–1981)
Stylianos Mavromichalis (Greek: Στυλιανός Μαυρομιχάλης) (1899 – 29 October 1981) was a Greek politician and prime minister.[1][2]
Biography
Born in Mani, Mavromichalis was a descendant of Petros Mavromichalis, who participated in the Greek War of Independence.
Mavromichalis studied law and was president of the Areopagus (court of cassation; Greek: Άρειος Πάγος), the Supreme Court of Greece.[3] He was prime minister for a very short period, from 29 September to 8 November 1963, of a transitional government.[4] He died in Athens on October 29, 1981.
References
- ^ Veremēs, Thanos; Dragoumēs, Markos (1995). Historical Dictionary of Greece. Scarecrow Press. p. 250. ISBN 978-0-8108-2888-9.
- ^ Clogg, Richard (1986-11-28). A Short History of Modern Greece. CUP Archive. p. 241. ISBN 978-0-521-32837-1.
- ^ Gkotzaridis, Evi (2016-01-01). A Pacifist's Life and Death: Grigorios Lambrakis and Greece in the Long Shadow of Civil War. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 313. ISBN 978-1-4438-8552-2.
Eventually, King Paul relented, asked Pipinelis to step down and replaced him with the President of the Supreme Court, Stylianos Mavromichalis (29 Sept 63-8 Nov 63).
- ^ Draenos, Stan (2012-06-12). Andreas Papandreou: The Making of a Greek Democrat and Political Maverick. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-85773-237-8.
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Panagiotis Pipinelis | Prime Minister of Greece (caretaker) 29 September – 8 November 1963 | Succeeded by George Papandreou |
- v
- t
- e
(1822–1832)
- Mavrokordatos
- P. Mavromichalis
- Kountouriotis
- And. Zaimis
- I. Kapodistrias
- A. Kapodistrias
(1833–1862)
(1862–1863)
(1863–1924)
- D. Voulgaris
- Kanaris
- Z. Valvis
- Kanaris
- Koumoundouros
- Deligeorgis
- Roufos
- D. Voulgaris
- Koumoundouros
- Deligeorgis
- Roufos
- D. Voulgaris
- Koumoundouros
- Moraitinis
- D. Voulgaris
- Thr. Zaimis
- Deligeorgis
- Koumoundouros
- Thr. Zaimis
- D. Voulgaris
- Deligeorgis
- D. Voulgaris
- Ch. Trikoupis
- Koumoundouros
- Deligeorgis
- Koumoundouros
- Deligeorgis
- Koumoundouros
- Kanaris
- Koumoundouros
- Ch. Trikoupis
- Koumoundouros
- Ch. Trikoupis
- Koumoundouros
- Ch. Trikoupis
- Diligiannis
- D. Valvis
- Ch. Trikoupis
- Diligiannis
- Konstantopoulos
- Ch. Trikoupis
- Sotiropoulos
- Ch. Trikoupis
- Deligiannis
- Diligiannis
- D. Rallis
- Al. Zaimis
- G. Theotokis
- Al. Zaimis
- Diligiannis
- G. Theotokis
- D. Rallis
- G. Theotokis
- Diligiannis
- D. Rallis
- G. Theotokis
- D. Rallis
- K. Mavromichalis
- Dragoumis
- El. Venizelos
- Gounaris
- El. Venizelos
- Al. Zaimis
- Skouloudis
- Al. Zaimis
- Kalogeropoulos
- El. Venizelos2
- Lambros
- Al. Zaimis
- El. Venizelos
- D. Rallis
- Kalogeropoulos
- Gounaris
- Stratos
- Protopapadakis
- Triantafyllakos
- Charalambis
- Krokidas
- Gonatas
- El. Venizelos
- Kafantaris
(1924–1935)
(1935–1973)
- Kondylis1
- Demertzis
- I. Metaxas1
- Koryzis
- Tsouderos2
- Tsolakoglou4
- Logothetopoulos4
- I. Rallis4
- Bakirtzis2
- S. Venizelos2
- Svolos2
- G. Papandreou (Sr.)
- Plastiras
- P. Voulgaris
- Archbishop Damaskinos
- Kanellopoulos
- Sofoulis
- Poulitsas3
- K. Tsaldaris
- Maximos
- K. Tsaldaris
- Sofoulis
- Vafeiadis2
- Partsalidis2
- Diomidis
- I. Theotokis3
- S. Venizelos
- Plastiras
- S. Venizelos
- Plastiras
- Kiousopoulos3
- Papagos
- K. Karamanlis (Sr.)
- Georgakopoulos3
- K. Karamanlis (Sr.)
- Dovas3
- K. Karamanlis (Sr.)
- Pipinelis
- Sty. Mavromichalis3
- G. Papandreou (Sr.)
- Paraskevopoulos3
- G. Papandreou (Sr.)
- Novas
- Tsirimokos
- Stefanopoulos
- Paraskevopoulos3
- Kanellopoulos3
(1967–1974)
(since 1974)
1Head of military/dictatorial government. 2Head of rival government not controlling Athens. 3Head of emergency or caretaker government. 4Head of collaborationist government during the Axis occupation (1941–44).
This article about a Greek politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e