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Germán Suárez Flamerich

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
President of Venezuela (1950-1952)
In thisSpanish name, the first or paternal surname is Suárez and the second or maternal family name is Flamerich.
Germán Suárez
President of Venezuela
In office
27 November 1950 – 2 December 1952
Preceded byCarlos Delgado Chalbaud
Succeeded byMarcos Pérez Jiménez
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Venezuela
In office
19 September 1949 – 16 February 1950
PresidentCarlos Delgado Chalbaud
Preceded byLuis Emilio Gómez Ruiz
Succeeded byLuis Emilio Gómez Ruiz
Personal details
Born(1907-04-10)10 April 1907
Died24 June 1990(1990-06-24) (aged 83)
SpouseRosario Pérez Espinal
Alma materCentral University of Venezuela
Signature

Germán Suárez Flamerich (10 April 1907 – 24 June 1990) was thepresident of Venezuela from 1950 to 1952. Flamerich was a lawyer, college professor, diplomat and politician.[1] He was president of the Government Junta from 1950 to 1952, after the assassination ofCarlos Delgado Chalbaud.

Biography

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Flamerich's parents were J.M. Suárez and Clorinda Flamerich. He graduated from the Liceo Caracas high school and then from theUniversidad Central de Venezuela. As a college student, he participated in the protests against the dictatorship of Gómez of the "Semana del Estudiante" in February 1928. He was sent to jail in April 1928 and again from October to December 1929.

Flamerich obtained his law degree from the Central University of Venezuela on July 30, 1931, with a thesis entitledLas fundaciones en Venezuela (The Foundations of Venezuela). After obtaining his doctorate, Flamerich became acivil law professor at the Universidad Central de Venezuela. In 1936, after the succession ofEleazar López Contreras to the presidency of Venezuela and the corresponding gradual democratic shift, Flamerich was named Chair of Civil Law.[2] He resigned that position in February 1937 in protest, after police officers forcibly entered the university campus.[2] Between 1937 and 1940 he held the presidency of the Coordinating and Reviewing Commission of Laws, and in 1939 and 1940 he served as president of the Caracas Municipal Council. Between 1940 and 1941 he was presidentad honorem of the Price Regulatory Commission.[3]

Flamerich resumed his position as Chair of Civil Law in 1941. For the legislative term from 1941 to 1944, he also became acongressional representative for theDistrito Federal. In that role he opposed a treaty that would demarcate the borders between Colombia and Venezuela, arguing that it was contrary to Venezuela's national interest.[4]

In 1945, the year of thecoup d'état led by the Patriotic Military Union and the Democratic Action Party againstIsaías Medina Angarita which createdRómulo Betancourt's Revolutionary Government Board, Flamerich returned to the law school at the Central University of Venezuela.[2] That year, he was appointed Dean of the law school there.

On November 14, 1945, he was appointed dean of the UCV Law School, a position in which he remained until 1947.[2] In February 1948, the novelist and candidate for AD, Rómulo Gallegos, took office as President of the Republic after becoming the first president elected by universal, direct and secret vote in the history of Venezuela. However, Gallegos was overthrown on November 24 by the same military leaders who led the 1945 coup. In 1948, Flamerich was named adviser to theMilitary Junta (1948). He later served as Secretary of Foreign Affairs in 1949 andambassador to Peru in 1950. On 27 November 1950, he was called to serve as president after the incumbent,ColonelCarlos Delgado Chalbaud, was assassinated. Although Flamerich was the nominal head of the government junta, real power was understood to be exercised by the Defense Minister, junta memberMarcos Pérez Jiménez.

When initial results of the1952 Constituent Assembly elections had the opposition well on its way to victory, the junta halted the count for three days and then released results showing the pro-government bloc with a majority. The junta dissolved itself and handed power to the military, which installed Pérez Jiménez as provisional president; he was confirmed as president a few months later by the Constituent Assembly.[5] Flamerich went into exile for many years afterward. He later returned to Venezuela and worked as a lawyer. He died in Caracas on 24 June 1990.

Personal life

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Flamerich was married to Rosario Pérez Carreño,[citation needed] who served asFirst Lady of Venezuela from 1950–1952,[citation needed]

  • Rosario Pérez Carreño
    Rosario Pérez Carreño

See also

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References

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  1. ^(in Spanish)Germán Suárez FlamerichArchived 2012-10-28 at theWayback Machine — Venezuelatuya.c
  2. ^abcdFlamerich, Oscar Suárez (1992).Germán Suárez Flamerich, presidente del quinto gobierno plural de Venezuela (in Spanish). Gráficas Lisbona.
  3. ^"Suárez Flamerich, Germán" (in Spanish). Bibliofep Historia. Retrieved29 July 2020.
  4. ^Alcántara, Tomás Polanco (1995).Eleazar López Contreras. Venezuela: Ediciones Ge. p. 207.ISBN 980-6386-07-8.
  5. ^Hollis Micheal Tarver Denova, Julia C. Frederick (2005),The history of Venezuela,Greenwood Publishing Group. p357
Sources

External links

[edit]
Political offices
Preceded by 50thPresident of Venezuela
27 November 1950 – 2 December 1952
Succeeded by
Preceded by 156thMinister of Foreign Affairs of Venezuela
19 September 1949 – 16 February 1950
Succeeded by
Since 1830
Acting / interim / caretaker presidents shown initalics
1 Recognized by theNational Assembly as "interim president" during theVenezuelan presidential crisis until 2023
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