PropertyValue
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  • José Félix Uriburu
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  • Lieutenant General José Félix Benito Uriburu y Uriburu (1868–1932) was the first de facto President of Argentina, achieved through a military coup, from September 6, 1930 to February 20, 1932. Uriburu was born in Salta Province, and was a nephew of President José Evaristo Uriburu. He graduated from the military college in 1890. Prior to World War I, he served as military attache to Germany and the United Kingdom. When he returned to Argentina in 1914, he was elected to the Argentine National Congress. He was appointed inspector general of the army by Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear in 1922.
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serviceyears
  • 1890
term start
  • 1930-09-06
Birth Date
  • 1868-07-20
Branch
death place
  • Paris, France
SmallImage
  • José Félix Uriburu.jpg
Name
  • José Félix Uriburu
Party
Birth Place
Title
term end
  • 1932-02-19
death date
  • 1932-04-29
Rank
Allegiance
  • Argentina
Successor
Before
Years
  • 1930
After
Profession
vicepresident
Order
  • 22
  • De facto
Nationality
  • Argentine
Predecessor
abstract
  • Lieutenant General José Félix Benito Uriburu y Uriburu (1868–1932) was the first de facto President of Argentina, achieved through a military coup, from September 6, 1930 to February 20, 1932. Uriburu was born in Salta Province, and was a nephew of President José Evaristo Uriburu. He graduated from the military college in 1890. Prior to World War I, he served as military attache to Germany and the United Kingdom. When he returned to Argentina in 1914, he was elected to the Argentine National Congress. He was appointed inspector general of the army by Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear in 1922. In September 1930, he led a military coup against democratically-elected President Hipólito Yrigoyen, in which the far-right Argentine Patriotic League participated. The coup marked the start of what was later called the Infamous Decade. His regime was strongly supported by rightist intellectuals such as Rodolfo and Julio Irazusta and Juan Carulla. He stayed as head of the government until 1932, implementing several reforms including cutting of government employees' salaries by more than 10 percent. After being diagnosed with stomach cancer in early 1932, he endured a brief period of futile recovery before dying in Paris, France on 29 April 1932.
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