Nikolaos Kalogeropoulos
Greek politician (1851–1927)
Nikolaos Kalogeropoulos (Greek: Νικόλαος Καλογερόπουλος; 23 July 1851 – 7 January 1927[1]) was a Greek politician and briefly Prime Minister of Greece.[2]
Biography
Kalogeropoulos was born in Chalkida, Euboea, and studied law in Athens and Paris. He was elected a member of the Hellenic Parliament a total of ten times representing Euboea and served as minister in several conservative governments. He was associated with the People's Party after its formation in 1920.
He briefly served as prime minister twice. He died in Athens on 7 January 1927 at the age of 75.
References
- ^ Note: Greece officially adopted the Gregorian calendar on 16 February 1923 (which became 1 March). All dates prior to that, unless specifically denoted, are Old Style.
- ^ Roth, Joseph (2012-10-10). Heimweh nach Prag: Feuilletons - Glossen - Reportagen für das "Prager Tagblatt" (in German). Wallstein Verlag. p. 498. ISBN 978-3-8353-2306-3.
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Alexandros Zaimis | Prime Minister of Greece 3–27 September 1916 | Succeeded by Spyridon Lambros |
Preceded by Dimitrios Rallis | Prime Minister of Greece 24 January – 25 March 1921 | Succeeded by Dimitrios Gounaris |
- 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