Benizelos Roufos
- View a machine-translated version of the Greek article.
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Greek Wikipedia article at [[:el:Μπενιζέλος Ρούφος]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|el|Μπενιζέλος Ρούφος}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
29 April 1863 – 18 October 1863 (o.s.)
28 November 1865 – 9 June 1866 (o.s.)
Patras, Morea Eyalet, Ottoman Empire (now Greece)
Patras, Kingdom of Greece
Benizelos Roufos (Greek: Μπενιζέλος Ρούφος; 1795–1868)[1] was a Greek politician and Prime Minister of Greece.
Biography
Early life
Roufos was born in Patras in 1795, a scion of the wealthy Roufos-Kanakaris family. He was the son of Athanasios Kanakaris who fought during the Greek War of Independence.
Career
During the government of Ioannis Kapodistrias (1828–1830), Roufos became governor of Elis.[citation needed] Later he would also serve as Foreign Minister.[citation needed] In 1855, Roufos was elected Mayor of Patras, a post he held for three years.[citation needed]
When King Otto was exiled in 1862 as a result of a revolution, Roufos became one of three viceroys - along with Konstantinos Kanaris and Dimitrios Voulgaris - that held power from 10 October 1862 until 19 October 1863.[2] Roufos served twice as Prime Minister of Greece, with his first term interrupted for a few days in June 1863.[3]
Death
Roufos died in Patras on 18 March 1868.
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.
- ^ "The Greek Revolution". The Western Daily Press. 1862-11-04. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-23.
- ^ Veremēs, Thanos (1995). Historical dictionary of Greece. Metuchen, N.J. : Scarecrow Press. p. 246. ISBN 978-0-8108-2888-9.
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Prime Minister of Greece 29 April - 18 October 1863 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by | Prime Minister of Greece 28 November 1865 – 9 June 1866 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
(1822–1832)
(1833–1862)
(1862–1863)
- D. Voulgaris
- Moraitinis
- Z. Valvis
- Kyriakos
- Roufos
(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)