Gaay Fortman, Wilhelm Friedrich de (b. May 8, 1911, Amsterdam, Netherlands - d. March 29, 1997, The Hague, Netherlands), interior minister of the Netherlands (1973-77). He was also justice minister and deputy prime minister (1977).
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Gabald髇, Jos?Rafael (b. Nov. 4, 1882, Betijoque, Trujillo, Venezuela - d. March 17, 1975, Caracas, Venezuela), governor of Lara (1936, 1945). He was also Venezuelan minister to Argentina (1939-41), Cuba (1941-43), Haiti (1943), and Brazil (1943-45).
Gabarayev, Vladislav (Nikolayevich) (b. Feb. 19, 1957, Staliniri [now Tskhinvali], South Ossetian autonomous oblast, Georgian S.S.R.), prime minister of South Ossetia (1995-96).
Gabites, Owston Paul (b. Dec. 5, 1913, Timaru, New Zealand - d. July 15, 1993, Kent, England), administrator of Tokelau (1965-68). He was New Zealand high commissioner to Western Samoa (1965-68) and ambassador to France (1969-75) and the Holy See (1973-75).
Gablaya, Ramin (Zaurovich) (b. July 25, 1968, Ochamchira, Abkhaz A.S.S.R., Georgian S.S.R.), acting interior minister of Abkhazia (2010).
Gabolde, Maurice (b. Aug. 27, 1891, Castres, Tarn, France - d. Jan. 14, 1972, Barcelona, Spain), justice minister of France (1943-44).
Gabrel, Rudolf (Georg) (b. Sept. 1, 1871, K黷i parish, Viru county, Russia [now in Estonia] - d. July 20, 1940), justice minister of Estonia (1923-25). He was also acting minister of education (1924).
Gabri? Marie Louis Gustave (b. Aug. 24, 1852, Marseille, France - d. 19...), governor of Martinique (1898-1901).
Gabriel, Almir Jos?de Oliveira (b. Aug. 18, 1932 - d. Feb. 19, 2013), governor of Par?(1995-2003). He was also mayor of Bel閙 (1983-86).
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Gabriel Estany, Joan (b. Nov. 28, 1963), general syndic of Andorra (2005-09).
Gabrielli, Rodolfo (Federico) (b. May 25, 1951, Mendoza, Argentina), governor of Mendoza (1991-95) and interior minister of Argentina (2001-02).
Gabrielsen, Hans (Julius) (b. Jan. 8, 1891, Kristiania [now Oslo], Norway - d. March 10, 1965, Lillehammer, Oppland [now in Innlandet], Norway), governor of Finnmark (1928-48) and Oppland (1948-61).
Gabrovski, Petur (Dimitrov) (b. July 9, 1898 - d. [executed] Feb. 1, 1945), interior minister (1940-43) and acting prime minister (1943) of Bulgaria. He was also minister of railways, posts, and telegraphs (1939-40).
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Gadea Mantilla, Fabio (b. Nov. 9, 1931, Ocotal, Nueva Segovia department, Nicaragua), president of the Central American Parliament (2004-05). He was a Nicaraguan presidential candidate in 2011.
Gaden, (Nicolas Jules) Henri (b. Jan. 24, 1867, Bordeaux, France - d. Dec. 12, 1939, Saint-Louis, Senegal), commissioner (1916-20) and lieutenant governor (1920-26) of Mauritania.
Gadgil, Narhar Vishnu, byname Kakasaheb Gadgil (b. Jan. 10, 1896, Malhagarh [now in Madhya Pradesh], India - d. Jan. 12, 1966, Poona [now Pune], Maharashtra, India), governor of Punjab (1958-62). He was also Indian minister of works (1947-52), mines and power (1947-50), commerce (1948), and production and supply (1950-52).
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Gadoliyev, Kurbansho (b. 1908, Khobost, Fergana oblast, Russia [now in Tajikistan?] - d. 1987), first secretary of the Communist Party committee of Gorno-Badakhshan autonomous oblast (1945-48). He was also minister of local industry of the Tadzhik S.S.R. (1952-55) and mayor of Khorog (19...-61).
Gadzhiyev, Islam (Abdulla ogly) (b. 1889 - d. [executed] Jan. 3, 1938), chairman of the Executive Committee of Nagorny Karabakh (1930-31).
Gadzhiyev, Zulfi (Salekh ogly), or Zulfi (Saleh oglu) Hajiyev (b. 1935 - d. [helicopter crash] Nov. 20, 1991, Garakend, Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan), chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Nakhichevan A.S.S.R. (1982-88). He was also deputy premier of the Azerbaijan S.S.R. (1989-91).
Gaekwar, Fateh Singh Rao (b. April 2, 1930, Baroda [now Vadodara, Gujarat], India - d. Sept. 1, 1988, Bombay [now Mumbai], India), maharaja of Baroda (1951-71). Known as "Jackie Baroda," Gaekwar was the last of a family of princes that dated to his great-great-great-grandfather, who had inherited the princedom as a poor 13-year-old cousin from a distant village. Gaekwar himself (1951) inherited the title and wealth then estimated at ?5 million when his father was deposed. Gaekwar was educated by English tutors and entered national politics in 1957, serving as a member of parliament for ten years. In the regional Gujarat government, he was (1967-71) minister of health, fisheries, and jails. Gaekwar, revolted after a two-month shooting safari in the Belgian Congo in the early 1950s, became an ardent conservationist, serving the World Wildlife Fund and establishing a zoo on the palace grounds. When Indira Gandhi abolished (1971) the titles and legendary privileges of Indian princes, Gaekwar protested but adapted. His palace was to be converted into a museum and arts centre.
Gaeta, Anthony R. (b. Sept. 8, 1927, West Brighton, Staten Island, New York City - d. Dec. 26, 1988, Staten Island), borough president of Staten Island (1977-84).
Ga鑤e, Martin Michel Charles Gaudin, duc de, Ga鑤e also spelled Ga雝e (b. Jan. 19, 1756, Saint-Denis [now in Seine-Saint-Denis d閜artement], France - d. Nov. 5, 1841, Gennevilliers, Seine [now in Hauts-de-Seine], France), finance minister of France (1799-1814, 1815). He was also governor of the Banque de France (1820-34). He was made comte (Count) Gaudin in 1808 and duc de Ga鑤e (Duke of Gaeta) in 1809.
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Gafoor, Burhan (b. Oct. 20, 1965), Singaporean diplomat. He has been ambassador to France (2007-10), high commissioner to Australia (2014-16), and permanent representative to the United Nations (2016- ).
Gafurov, Bobodzhan (Gafurovich) (b. Dec. 31 [Dec. 18, O.S.], 1908, Isfisar village, near Khodzhent [now Khujand], Russia [now in Tajikistan] - d. July 12, 1977, Dushanbe, Tadzhik S.S.R.), first secretary of the Communist Party of the Tadzhik S.S.R. (1946-56). He was also first secretary of the party committee of Stalinabad oblast (1948-51).
Gagarin, Knyaz (Prince) Aleksandr (Ivanovich) (b. 1801 - d. Nov. 8 [Oct. 27, O.S.], 1857, Kutaisi, Russia [now in Georgia]), governor of Derbent (1846-51) and military governor (1851-53) and governor-general (1856-57) of Kutaisi; son-in-law of Andrey Borozdin. On Nov. 3 (Oct. 22, O.S.), 1857, he was mortally wounded by deposed prince Konstantine of Svania; he died five days later.
Gagarin, Knyaz (Prince) Grigory (Ivanovich) (b. March 28 [March 17, O.S.], 1782, Moscow, Russia - d. Feb. 24, 1837, Munich, Bavaria [Germany]), Russian diplomat; cousin of Knyaz Pavel Gagarin. He was minister to the Papal State (1827-32) and Bavaria (1832-37).
Gagarin, Knyaz (Prince) Konstantin (Dmitriyevich) (b. Nov. 18, 1841 - d. 1916), governor of Tiflis (1878-83) and Ryazan (1883-86).
Gagarin, Knyaz (Prince) Pavel (Pavlovich) (b. March 15 [March 4, O.S.], 1789, Moscow, Russia - d. March 4 [Feb. 21, O.S.], 1872, St. Petersburg, Russia), chairman of the Committee of Ministers of Russia (1864-72). He was also chairman of the Imperial State Council (1864-65).
Gagarin, Knyaz (Prince) Sergey (Pavlovich) (b. Feb. 26 [Feb. 14, O.S.], 1818 - d. Oct. 15 [Oct. 3, O.S.], 1870, Kazan, Russia), governor of Arkhangelsk (1866-69) and Saratov (1869-70); son of Knyaz Pavel Gagarin.
Gage, Henry T(ifft) (b. Dec. 25, 1852, Geneva, N.Y. - d. Aug. 28, 1924, Los Angeles, Calif.), governor of California (1899-1903). He was also U.S. minister to Portugal (1910).
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Gagloyev, Sergey (Grigoryevich) (b. 1896, Kusdzhita, Tiflis province, Russia [now in South Ossetia, Georgia] - d. 1938), executive secretary of the Communist Party committee of South Ossetia (1921).
Gagloyty, Yury (Sergeyevich) (b. Oct. 10, 1934, Tskhinvali, South Ossetian autonomous oblast, Georgian S.S.R.), foreign minister of South Ossetia (1996-98).
Gago, Carlos Jorge Mendes Correia (b. June 25, 1934, Lisbon, Portugal - d. Dec. 25, 2015), foreign minister of Portugal (1978). He was also minister of economic coordination and planning (1979-80).
Gaguim, Carlos Henrique, byname of Carlos Henrique Amorim (b. April 21, 1961), governor of Tocantins (2009-11).
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Gahona, Alfonso, Belizean diplomat. He was charg?d'affaires at the United Nations (1997-98).
Gahutu, Zacharie (b. Nov. 29, 1950, Tangara, Burundi), Burundian diplomat. He was permanent representative to the United Nations (2009-11).
Gai (Kok), Riek, chairman of the Southern Sudan Coordination Council (2002-05). He was governor of Jonglei state in 1998-2000.
Gaiciuc, Victor (b. March 12, 1957, Pepeni village, Singerei district, Moldavian S.S.R.), defense minister of Moldova (2001-04, 2019-20, 2020- ).
Gaidam, (Alhaji) Ibrahim (b. Sept. 15, 1956, Bukarti [now in Yobe state], Nigeria), governor of Yobe (2009-19).
Gaidar, Yegor (Timurovich) (b. March 19, 1956, Moscow, Russian S.F.S.R. - d. Dec. 16, 2009, Uspenskoye, Moscow oblast, Russia), finance minister (1992) and acting prime minister (1992) of Russia. He was also deputy prime minister (1991-92), economy minister (1991-92, 1993-94), and first deputy prime minister (1992, 1993-94).
Gailis, Maris (b. July 9, 1951, Riga, Latvian S.S.R.), prime minister (1994-95), acting interior minister (1994), and acting defense minister (1995) of Latvia. He was also minister of state reform (1993-94) and a deputy prime minister and minister of environmental protection and regional development (1995-96).
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Gainuse, Alexandrina (b. July 25, 1932, Stoina, Gorj county, Romania), a deputy prime minister of Romania (1982-86). She was also first secretary of the party committee and chairman of the executive committee of Bacau county (1979-82) and minister of light industry (1986-87).
Gair, George (Frederick) (b. Oct. 13, 1926, Dunedin, New Zealand - d. Aug. 17, 2015), New Zealand politician. He was minister of customs (1972), housing and regional development (1975-77), national and regional development and energy (1977-78), health and social welfare (1978-81), and transport, civil aviation, and railways (1981-84), high commissioner to the United Kingdom (1991-94), and mayor of North Shore City (1995-98).
Gairdner, Sir Charles Henry (b. March 20, 1898, Batavia, Netherlands East Indies [now Jakarta, Indonesia] - d. Feb. 22, 1983, Nedlands, near Perth, W.Aus.), governor of Western Australia (1951-63) and Tasmania (1963-68); knighted 1948.
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Gait醤 (C.), Francisco, minister of war, navy, and aviation of Nicaragua (1950-56).
Gait醤 (Ayala), Jorge Eli閏er (b. Jan. 23, 1898 [or possibly Jan. 23 or 26, 1903], Bogot?[or Cucunub? Cundinamarca], Colombia - d. [assassinated] April 9, 1948, Bogot?, Colombian presidential candidate (1946). He was also president of the Chamber of Representatives (1931-33, 1939-40), mayor of Bogot?(1936-37), and minister of education (1940-41) and labour, hygiene, and social security (1943-44).
Gait醤 Jaramillo, Gloria (Amparo de las Mercedes) (b. Sept. 20, 1937, Bogot? Colombia), Colombian politician; daughter of Jorge Eli閏er Gait醤. She was ambassador to Romania (1978-82) and a minor presidential candidate (1994).
Gait醤 Mahecha, Bernardo (b. July 17, 1924, Caparrap? Cundinamarca, Colombia - d. March 22, 2018, Bogot? Colombia), justice minister of Colombia (1982-83). He was also mayor of Bogot?(1976-78) and ambassador to the Vatican (1985-86).
Gait醤 Pati駉, R間ulo (Alberto) (b. Aug. 8, 1901, Pacho, Cundinamarca, Colombia - d. April 11, 1994, Bogot? Colombia), interior minister of Colombia (1949).
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Gajraj, (Jairam) Ronald (b. 1953? - d. Dec. 15, 2018), home affairs minister of Guyana (1999-2005). He was also high commissioner to India (2005-15) and Bangladesh (2015).
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Gakosso, 蒬ouard, also spelled Ngakosso (b. 1941), finance minister of Congo (Brazzaville) (1989-91).
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G醠, Zolt醤 (b. Dec. 10, 1940, Budapest, Hungary), interior minister of Hungary (1990). He was also president of the National Assembly (1994-98).
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Galaj, Dyzma (Kazimierz) (b. Jan. 15, 1915, Mystkowice, Poland - d. Dec. 6, 2000, Warsaw, Poland), Polish politician. He was marshal of the Sejm (1971-72).
Gal醤 (Sarmiento), Luis Carlos (b. Sept. 29, 1943, Bucaramanga, Colombia - d. Aug. 18, 1989, Bogot? Colombia), Colombian presidential candidate (1982). He was also minister of education (1970-72) and ambassador to Italy (1972-75). He was again a Liberal Party candidate for the 1990 presidential election but was shot by Medell韓 cartel drug traffickers at a campaign rally in Soacha, outside Bogot? he died in hospital.
Galanos, Alexis (b. 1940 - d. July 15, 2019, Kos, Greece), Cypriot politician. He was president of the House of Representatives (1991-96), a minor presidential candidate (1998), and Greek Cypriot mayor in exile of Famagusta (2007-19).
Galassi, Clelio (b. March 2, 1950, Serravalle, San Marino), captain-regent (1976) and finance minister (1990-2002) of San Marino. In 2014-15 he was ambassador to the Vatican.
Galavanov, Aleksandr (Georgiyevich) (b. 1902, Tiflis, Russia [now Tbilisi, Georgia] - d. January 1986), chairman of the Executive Committee of the South Ossetian autonomous oblast (1943-48).
Galazov, Akhsarbek (Khadzhimurzayevich) (b. Oct. 15, 1929, Khumalag village, North Ossetian autonomous oblast, Russian S.F.S.R. - d. April 10, 2013, Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia-Alania, Russia), chairman of the Supreme Council (1990-94) and president (1994-98) of North Ossetia-Alania.
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Gali Fayad, (Jos? Antonio, byname Tony Gali (b. Nov. 25, 1959, Puebla, Puebla, Mexico), governor of Puebla (2017-18). He was also mayor of Puebla (2014-16).
Galich L髉ez, Manuel Francisco (b. Nov. 30, 1913, Guatemala City, Guatemala - d. Aug. 30, 1984, Havana, Cuba), foreign minister of Guatemala (1951-52). A noted writer, he was also education minister (1946) and minister to Uruguay (1953-54) and Argentina (1954).
Galijasevic, Miralem (b. Sept. 20, 1955, Maglaj [now in Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina]), premier of Zenica-Doboj (2006-11, 2015-19).
Gal韓dez (Cordero), Jos?(Alberto) (b. June 25, 1955), governor of Cojedes (1995-2000).
Galindo Pohl, Reynaldo (b. Oct. 18, 1918, Sonsonate, El Salvador - d. Jan. 5, 2012, San Salvador, El Salvador), member of the Revolutionary Council of Government of El Salvador (1948-49). He was also culture minister (1950-56) and permanent representative to the United Nations (1967-77).
Galkin-Vraskoy, Mikhail (Nikolayevich) (b. Sept. 29 [Sept. 17, O.S.], 1832, Polyanki, Kazan province [now in Tatarstan], Russia - d. April 21 [April 8, O.S.], 1916, Petrograd [St. Petersburg], Russia), governor of Estonia (1868-70) and Saratov (1870-79).
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Gallagher (Canaval), Manuel C. (b. June 3, 1885, Lima, Peru - d. May 6, 1953, Lima), foreign minister of Peru (1944-45, 1950-52). He was also justice minister (1943-44).
Gallagher, Paul (Richard) (b. Jan. 23, 1954, Liverpool, England), Vatican foreign minister (2014- ). He was apostolic nuncio to Burundi (2004-09), Guatemala (2009-12), and Australia (2012-14).
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Gallardo (Lebrero), 羘gel (Juan Pedro) (b. Nov. 19, 1867, Buenos Aires, Argentina - d. May 13, 1934, Buenos Aires), foreign minister of Argentina (1922-28). He was also president of the National Council of Education (1916-21), minister to Italy (1921-22), and rector of the University of Buenos Aires (1932-34).
Gallardo (Rom醤), Jos?(Walter) (b. March 16, 1935, Pi馻s, El Oro province, Ecuador), defense minister of Ecuador (1992-95, 1998-2000). He was a minor presidential candidate in 1996.
Gallardo (Garc韆), Jos?Miguel (b. Sept. 29, 1897, San Germ醤, Puerto Rico - d. July 18, 1976, San Juan, Puerto Rico), acting governor of Puerto Rico (1940-41, 1941).
Gallardo Hern醤dez, Carmen Mar韆 (b. Nov. 28, 1949, San Salvador, El Salvador), Salvadoran diplomat. She has been ambassador to France and Portugal (1993-94, 2016- ) and Austria (2014-16) and permanent representative to the United Nations (2004-10).
Gallardo Lozada, Jorge (b. 1934, Sucre, Bolivia), interior and justice minister of Bolivia (1970-71).
Gallardo Nieto, Galvarino (b. Aug. 30, 1877, Talca, Chile - d. Jan. 13, 1957, Cartagena, Chile), finance minister (1922) and foreign minister (1924) of Chile. He was also mayor of Santiago (1943-46).
Gallatin, (Abraham Alfonse) Albert (b. Jan. 29, 1761, Geneva, Switzerland - d. Aug. 12, 1849, Astoria, N.Y.), U.S. treasury secretary (1801-14). He was also minister to France (1816-23) and the United Kingdom (1826-27).
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Gallet, Gustave Pierre Th閛dore (b. March 15, 1850, Valescourt, Oise, France - d. 1926), governor of the French Settlements in Oceania (1896-1901).
Galley, Robert (b. Jan. 11, 1921, Paris, France - d. June 8, 2012, Troyes, Aube, France), French minister of armies (1973-74) and defense (1980-81). He was also minister of equipment (1968, 1974-76), housing (1968), posts and telecommunications (1969-72), transports (1972-73), and cooperation (1976-81) and mayor of Troyes (1972-95).
Gallieni, Joseph (Simon) (b. April 24, 1849, Saint-B閍t, Haute-Garonne, France - d. May 27, 1916, Versailles, France), commandant-superior of Upper Senegal (1886-88), resident-general (1896-97) and governor-general (1897-1905) of Madagascar, and war minister of France (1915-16).
Gallin-Douathe, Michel (b. June 4, 1920, Limassa, Oubangui-Chari [now Central African Republic] - d. 1989), interior minister of the Central African Republic (1979). He was also ambassador to the United States (1960-62, 1965-70) and France (1970-72) and permanent representative to the United Nations (1960-70).
Gallo, Franco (b. April 23, 1937, Rome, Italy), finance minister of Italy (1993-94). He was also president of the Constitutional Court (2013).
Gallo, Nicol醩 (Vicente) (b. Feb. 24, 1938), infrastructure and housing minister of Argentina (1999-2000).
Gallo (Hern醤dez), Pedro (b. 1818 - d. 1886), governor of Santiago del Estero (1861-62).
Gallo Porras, Luis (Teodoro) (b. Nov. 9, 1893, Lima, Peru - d. April 22, 1972, Lima), prime minister of Peru (1958-59). He was also mayor of Lima (1934-37, 1941-45, 1948-49), first vice president (1956-62), and minister of finance and commerce (1958-59).
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Gallotti, Luiz (Octavio Pires e Albuquerque) (b. Aug. 15, 1904, Tijucas, Santa Catarina, Brazil - d. Oct. 24, 1978, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), governor of Santa Catarina (1945-46). He was also Brazilian attorney general (1947-49) and president of the Superior Electoral Court (1955-57) and the Supreme Federal Court (1966-68, 1969).
Galsworthy, Sir Arthur Norman (b. July 1, 1916 - d. Oct. 7, 1986), governor of Pitcairn Island (1970-73); knighted 1967. He was British high commissioner to New Zealand (1969-73) and ambassador to Ireland (1973-76).
Galt, Sir Alexander Tilloch (b. Sept. 6, 1817, London, England - d. Sept. 19, 1893, Montreal, Que.), finance minister of Canada (1867); knighted 1869. He was also high commissioner to the United Kingdom (1880-83).
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Galusha, Jonas (b. Feb. 11, 1753, Norwalk, Connecticut - d. Sept. 24, 1834, Shaftsbury, Vt.), governor of Vermont (1809-13, 1815-20); son-in-law of Thomas Chittenden; brother-in-law of Martin Chittenden.
Galuska, Vladim韗 (b. Oct. 2, 1952, Prague, Czechoslovakia [now in Czech Republic]), Czech diplomat. He was permanent representative to the United Nations (1993 [acting], 1997-2001) and ambassador to Slovakia (2004-09).
Galvanauskas, Ernestas (b. Nov. 19, 1882, Zizonys, Russia [now in Lithuania] - d. July 24, 1967, Aix-les-Bains, France), prime minister (1919-20, 1922-24) and foreign minister (1922-24) of Lithuania. He was also minister of finance, trade, and industry (1919-20, 1939-40) and minister to the United Kingdom (1924-27).
Galv鉶, Ignacio da Cunha (b. July 24, 1821, Porto Alegre, Brazil - d. Feb. 6, 1906, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), acting president of Santa Catarina (1861).
Galv鉶, Jos?Leite (d. 1889?), acting president of Mato Grosso (1881, 1883).
Galv鉶, Manoel Antonio (b. Jan. 3, 1791, S鉶 Salvador da Bahia [now Salvador], Brazil - d. March 21, 1850, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), principal minister of Brazil (1839-40). He was also president of Alagoas (1829-30), Esp韗ito Santo (1830), Minas Gerais (1831), and Rio Grande do Sul (1831-33, 1846-48) and justice minister (1844-45).
Galv鉶, Manoel do Nascimento da Fonseca (b. Dec. 25, 1837, Est鈔cia, Sergipe, Brazil - d. Feb. 23, 1916, Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil), acting president of Santa Catarina (1869-70, 1870, 1872-73) and president of Sergipe (1873); brother of Rufino En閍s Gustavo Galv鉶, bar鉶 e visconde de Maracaju, and Antonio En閍s Gustavo Galv鉶, bar鉶 do Rio Apa.
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Galv鉶, Ney Neves (b. March 22, 1902, Rio Pardo, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil - d. Sept. 6, 1990, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), finance minister of Brazil (1963-64). He was also president of the Bank of Brazil (1961-63).
Galv阛s, Ernane (b. Oct. 1, 1922, Cachoeiro de Itapemirim, Esp韗ito Santo, Brazil), finance minister of Brazil (1980-85). He was also president of the Central Bank (1968-74, 1979-80).
Galveias, Andr?de Melo e Castro, (4? conde das (b. December 1668, Portugal - d. Jan. 28, 1753), governor of Minas Gerais (1732-35) and viceroy of Brazil (1735-49).
Galveias, Francisco de Melo e Castro, (5? conde das (b. 1702, Estremoz, Portugal - d. ...), governor of Mozambique (1750-58); son of Andr?de Melo e Castro, conde das Galveias.
G醠vez (Dur髇), Juan Manuel (b. June 10, 1887, Tegucigalpa, Honduras - d. Aug. 19, 1972, Tegucigalpa), president of Honduras (1949-54). He was also minister of interior and justice (1925-29) and war, navy, and aviation (1933-49).
G醠vez (Eg鷖quiza), Manuel Mar韆 (b. Oct. 1, 1838, Cajamarca, Peru - d. March 27, 1917, Lima, Peru), foreign minister (1881, 1899) and prime minister (1899) of Peru; brother of Pedro G醠vez.
G醠vez (Eg鷖quiza), Pedro (b. May 28, 1822, Cajamarca, Peru - d. Aug. 23, 1878, Paris, France), prime minister of Peru (1868-69). He was also minister of justice, education, and worship (1855), finance and commerce (1862), and interior, police, and public works (1868-69) and minister to Guatemala (1856), France (1862-64, 1870-78), and the United Kingdom (1870-78).
G醠vez (Madrid), Virgilio (Roberto) (b. April 20, 1911, Santa Barbara, Honduras), foreign minister of Honduras (1975-76). He was also ambassador to El Salvador (1965-69) and earlier to Nicaragua, Ecuador, Chile, and Guatemala.
G醠vez Barnes, Roberto (b. May 18, 1925, Puerto Cort閟, Honduras - d. March 19, 1995, Tegucigalpa, Honduras), member of the Military Government Council of Honduras (1956-57). He was also minister of communications and public works (1956) and ambassador to the United States (1970-74).
G醠vez Barrenechea, Jos?(Gabriel) (b. Aug. 7, 1885, Tarma, Jun韓 department, Peru - d. Feb. 8, 1957, Lima, Peru), foreign minister of Peru (1931). He was also justice minister (1931), minister to Colombia (1935-36), first vice president (1945-48), and president of the Senate (1945-48, 1956-57).
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Galvis Galvis, Alejandro (b. Feb. 12, 1891, Curit? Santander, Colombia - d. June 17, 1981, Bucaramanga, Santander), war minister of Colombia (1942-43). The founder (1919) and long-time director of the Vanguardia Liberal newspaper, he was also governor of Santander (1930-31, 1944-46), president of the Senate (1936), minister to Mexico (1936-38), and ambassador to Venezuela (1943-44) and Spain (1969-70).
Galway, George (Vere Arundell) Monckton-Arundell, (8th) Viscount (b. March 24, 1882 - d. March 27, 1943, Blyth, Nottinghamshire, England), governor-general of New Zealand (1935-41). He succeeded as viscount in 1931.
Galway, Sir Henry Lionel, original surname (until November 1911) Gallwey (b. Sept. 25, 1859, Southampton, Hampshire, England - d. June 17, 1949, London, England), governor of Saint Helena (1903-11), Gambia (1911-14), and South Australia (1914-20); knighted 1910.
Gama, Agostinho Luiz da (b. April 19, 1820, Cuiab? Mato Grosso, Brazil - d. Feb. 25, 1880, S鉶 Paulo, Brazil), president of Alagoas (1859).
Gama, Ant髇io de Saldanha da (b. Feb. 5, 1778, Lisbon, Portugal - d. July 23, 1839, Lisbon), governor of Angola (1807-10); grandson of Jo鉶 de Saldanha da Gama; brother of Jo鉶 de Saldanha da Gama Mello Torres Guedes de Brito, conde da Ponte.
Gama, Antonio Joaquim de Miranda Nogueira da (b. Jan. 8, 1828, S鉶 Jo鉶 del Rey, Minas Gerais, Brazil - d. July 6, 1914, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), president of Esp韗ito Santo (1877).
Gama, Antonio Pinto Chichorro da (b. April 1800, Nazar? Bahia, Brazil - d. June 10, 1887, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), principal minister (1833-35) and finance minister (1834) of Brazil. He was also president of Esp韗ito Santo (1831-32), Alagoas (1832-33), and Pernambuco (1845-48) and president of the Chamber of Deputies (1848-50).
Gama, Cl髒is Salgado da (b. Jan. 20, 1906, Leopoldina, Minas Gerais, Brazil - d. July 25, 1978, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais), acting governor of Minas Gerais (1955-56). He was also Brazilian minister of education and culture (1956-60, 1960-61).
Gama, Dom韈io da, byname of Dom韈io Afonso Forneiro (b. Oct. 23, 1862, Maric? Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - d. Nov. 8, 1925, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), foreign minister of Brazil (1918-19). He was also minister to Peru (1906-08) and ambassador to the United States (1911-18) and the United Kingdom (1919-24).
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Gama, Jo鉶 de Saldanha da (b. March 19, 1674 - d. May 5, 1752), viceroy of Portuguese India (1725-32).
Gama, Jo鉶 Soares da (b. Dec. 26, 1955, Bafat? Portuguese Guinea [now Guinea-Bissau]), Guinea-Bissauan diplomat. He was charg?d'affaires (1999-2000) and permanent representative (2010-17) to the United Nations and ambassador to France (2002-04).
Gamarnik, Yan (Borisovich), original name Yakov (Pudikovich) Gamarnik (b. June 2 [May 21, O.S.], 1894, Zhitomir, Russia [now Zhytomyr, Ukraine] - d. [suicide] May 31, 1937, Moscow, Russian S.F.S.R.), first secretary of the Communist Party of the Belorussian S.S.R. (1928-29). He was also chairman of the party committee of Odessa province (1920), executive secretary of the party committee of Kiev province (1920), first secretary of the party committee of Dalnevostochny kray (1927-28); chairman of the Revolutionary Committees of Kiev province (1920-21) and Dalnevostochny kray (1923-26); and chairman of the Executive Committees of Kiev (1921-23) and Primorye (1923-24) provinces and Dalnevostochny kray (1926-27).
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Gamazo y Calvo, Germ醤 (b. May 28, 1840, Boecillo, Valladolid, Spain - d. Nov. 22, 1901, Madrid, Spain), finance minister of Spain (1892-94). He was also minister of development (1883, 1898) and overseas (1885-86).
Gambari, Ibrahim (Agboola) (b. Nov. 24, 1944, Ilorin [now in Kwara state], Nigeria), foreign minister of Nigeria (1984-85). He was also permanent representative to the United Nations (1990-99), president of the UNICEF Executive Board (1999), and UN special envoy to Myanmar (2007-09).
Gambarov, Aleksandr (Grigoryevich) (b. 1890, Poti, Kutaisi province, Russia [now in Georgia] - d. [executed] 1937), executive secretary of the Communist Party committee (1921), chairman of the Revolutionary Committee (1921-22), and chairman of the Council of People's Commissars (1922) of Adzharistan. He was also Soviet charg?d'affaires in Latvia (1925).
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Gamboa, Rafael P(ascasio) (b. May 20, 1897, Tuxtla Guti閞rez, Chiapas, Mexico - d. Aug. 2, 1979), governor of Chiapas (1940-44). He was also president of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (1946) and minister of health and welfare (1946-52) of Mexico.
Gamboa Iglesias, (Jos? Federico (Francisco de Paula Demetrio Trinidad) (b. Dec. 22, 1864, Mexico City, Mexico - d. Aug. 15, 1939, Mexico City), foreign minister of Mexico (1913). He was also charg?d'affaires (1899-1900, 1901-02) and minister (1905-07) to Honduras and Guatemala and minister to the Netherlands and Belgium (1911-13).
Game, Sir Philip Woolcott (b. March 30, 1876, London, England - d. Feb. 4, 1961, Sevenoaks, Kent, England), governor of New South Wales (1930-35); knighted 1924. He was also commissioner of the (London) Metropolitan Police (1935-45).
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Gamidov, Abdusamad (Mustafayevich) (b. April 21, 1966, Mekegi village, Levashi district, Dagestan A.S.S.R., Russian S.F.S.R.), prime minister of Dagestan (2013-18).
Gamio Palacio, Fernando (b. Feb. 15, 1909, Lima, Peru - d. 1985), foreign minister of Peru (1955). He was also prefect of Arequipa (1953) and ambassador to Bolivia (1954-55) and Brazil (1956).
Gamlin, Jarbom (b. April 18, 1961, Aalo [now in West Siang district, Arunachal Pradesh], India - d. Nov. 30, 2014, Gurgaon [now Gurugram], Haryana, India), chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh (2011).
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Gan, Baron Pavel (Vasilyevich), German Paul Baron von Hahn (b. July 30, 1793, Mitava, Russia [now Jelgava, Latvia] - d. Jan. 30, 1862, Mannheim, Baden [now in Baden-W黵ttemberg, Germany]), governor of Courland (1824-27) and Livonia (1827-29).
Gana, (Alhaji) Mohammed Abba (b. 1943, Danboa [now in Borno state], Nigeria), minister of the Federal Capital Territory (2001-03).
Ganao, David Charles (b. July 20, 1926, Djambala, Middle Congo [now Congo (Brazzaville)] - d. July 6, 2012, Morocco), foreign minister (1963-68, 1973-75) and prime minister (1996-97) of Congo (Brazzaville). He was also ambassador to Switzerland (1970-73).
Gandalovic, Petr (b. Aug. 15, 1964, Prague, Czechoslovakia [now in Czech Republic]), Czech politician. He was mayor of 趕t?nad Labem (2002-06), minister of regional development (2006-07) and agriculture (2007-09), and ambassador to the United States (2011-17).
Gandamana, Ipik (b. 1906 - d. ...), governor of Jawa Barat (1956-59) and interior minister of Indonesia (1959-64).
Gandapur, Sardar Inayatullah Khan (b. 1919, Kulachi tehsil, Dera Ismail Khan district, North-West Frontier Province [now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa], India [now in Pakistan] - d. April 28, 2005, Peshawar, North-West Frontier Province, Pakistan), chief minister of North-West Frontier Province (1973-75).
G醤dara Gallegos, Mauricio, interior minister of Ecuador (2005). He was also ambassador to the United Kingdom (1984-86).
G醤dara y Navarro (Castanedo y P閞ez de Irujo), Jos?de la (b. Oct. 15, 1820, Bilbao, Spain - d. Sept. 1, 1885, Biarritz, France), governor of Spanish Guinea (1859-62) and governor-general of Santo Domingo (1864-65) and the Philippines (1866-69).
Gandarilla Bermejo, Julio C閟ar (b. 1943, Matanzas province, Cuba - d. Nov. 24, 2020, Havana, Cuba), interior minister of Cuba (2017-20).
Gandarillas (Luco), Jos?Antonio (b. 1839, Santiago, Chile - d. Feb. 9, 1913, Santiago), finance minister of Chile (1870-71); brother of Pedro Nolasco Gandarillas. He was also minister of justice and public instruction (1879-80).
Gandarillas (Luco), Pedro Nolasco (b. 1837, Santiago, Chile - d. Nov. 11, 1891, Santiago), finance minister of Chile (1885, 1889, 1890).
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Gandhi, Gopalkrishna (b. April 22, 1945), governor of West Bengal (2004-09) and Bihar (2006); grandson of Mohandas Gandhi and Chakravarti Rajagopalachari. He was Indian high commissioner to South Africa and Lesotho (1996-97) and Sri Lanka (2000-02) and ambassador to Norway and Iceland (2002-04).
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Gandhi, Sanjay (b. Dec. 14, 1946, New Delhi - d. June 23, 1980, New Delhi), Indian politician; son of Indira Gandhi; brother of Rajiv Gandhi. Heir apparent of India's leading political family, he began to play an increasing role behind the scenes when his mother used her power as prime minister to declare a state of emergency in 1975. He was widely thought to be a powerful but negative influence on his mother's policies. His campaigns for birth control and slum clearance aroused hostility, mainly because of the harsh methods he used to implement them. But his ruthless and willful approach was combined with undoubted political acumen, and he was responsible for many of the electoral gains of his mother's Congress (I) Party and his own Youth Congress early in 1980. There were serious doubts, however, about his respect for democratic institutions and the use he would make of the power he seemed certain to acquire. Gandhi died when the light aircraft in which he was flying crashed.
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Gane, Nicolae (b. Feb. 1, 1838, Falticeni, Moldavia [now in Romania] - d. April 16, 1916, Iasi, Romania), Romanian politician. He was mayor of Iasi (1872-76, 1881, 1887-88, 1896-99, 1907-11), minister of agriculture, industry, commerce, and domains (1888), and president of the Senate (1897-99).
Ganev (Vurbanov), Dimitur (b. Oct. 28, 1898, Gradets, Slivenski okrug, Bulgaria - d. April 20, 1964, Sofia, Bulgaria), president of Bulgaria (1958-64). He was also minister to Romania (1947-48), minister of external trade (1948-52), and ambassador to Czechoslovakia (1952-54).
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Ganga, Dieudonn?(Antoine) (b. 1945?), foreign minister of Congo (Brazzaville) (1992). He was ambassador to the United States in 1996-97.
Gangard, Yegor (Yegorovich) (b. 1812 - d. Dec. 27 [Dec. 15, O.S.], 1882), governor of Bessarabia (1867-71).
Ganic, Ejup (b. March 3, 1946, Novi Pazar, Serbia), president of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1997-99, 2000-01). On March 1, 2010, he was arrested in London after Serbia had issued an extradition warrant over alleged war crimes; he was released on bail on March 11. The accusation related to an attack on a convoy of Serb-led Yugoslav soldiers who retreated from Sarajevo in May 1992 taking Pres. Alija Izetbegovic with them as a prisoner; Ganic was acting president during the less than two days that Izetbegovic was held.
Ganilau, Ratu Sir Penaia (Kanatabatu), Tui Cakau (b. July 28, 1918, Taveuni island, Fiji - d. Dec. 15, 1993, Washington, D.C.), deputy prime minister (1973-83), governor-general (1983-87), and president (1987-93) of Fiji; knighted 1974. He became Tui Cakau (chief of Cakaudrove) in 1988.
Ganiyev, Elyor (Majidovich) (b. 1960, Tashkent oblast, Uzbek S.S.R.), foreign minister of Uzbekistan (2005-06, 2010-12). He was also minister of foreign economic relations (1998-2002, 2006-10, 2012-17) and transport (2020) and a deputy prime minister (2002-05, 2009-12, 2019-20).
Ganiyev, Shukhrat (Madaminovich) (b. Sept. 11, 1968, Margilan, Uzbek S.S.R.), a deputy prime minister of Uzbekistan (2020- ). He was also hokim (head) of Fergana region (2011-20).
Ganoo, Alan (b. Jan. 17, 1951), foreign minister of Mauritius (2021- ). He has also been speaker of the National Assembly (1982-83), minister of justice and attorney general (1991-93), minister of housing (1996-97), public utilities (2000-05), fisheries (acting, 2004-05), and transport and light rail (2019- ), and leader of the opposition (2013).
Ganoza y Cavero, Agust韓 G(uillermo) (b. Jan. 11, 1855, Trujillo, Peru - d. March 23, 1926, Bournemouth, England), prime minister of Peru (1911-12). He was also mayor of Trujillo (1886-90), president of the Senate (1908-09), minister of justice, worship, and education (1911-12), and minister to Germany (1921-22) and the United Kingdom (1922-26).
Gans y L髉ez Mart韓ez, 觭car B. (b. May 12, 1903, Havana, Cuba - d. Dec. 4, 1965, Mexico City, Mexico), premier of Cuba (1951-52). He was also minister to Costa Rica (1940-41), Chile (1941), Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador (1943-44), and Uruguay (1944-45), ambassador to Argentina (1946-47) and the United States (1949-50), and minister of labour (1941-42), justice (1950-51), and foreign affairs (1951).
Gantt, Harvey B(ernard) (b. Jan. 14, 1943, Charleston, S.C.), mayor of Charlotte (1983-87). He was the city's first black mayor.
Gantz, Benny, byname of Benjamin Gantz (b. June 9, 1959, Kfar Ahim, Israel), defense minister of Israel (2020- ). He was also chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces (2011-15) and speaker of the Knesset (2020).
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Gaplikov, Sergey (Anatolyevich) (b. April 29, 1970, Frunze, Kirgiz S.S.R. [now Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan]), prime minister of Chuvashia (2004-10) and head of the republic of Komi (2015-20).
Gapurov, Mukhamednazar (Gapurovich) (b. Feb. 15, 1922 - d. [killed] July 13, 1999), chairman of the Council of Ministers and foreign minister (1963-69) and first secretary of the Communist Party (1969-85) of the Turkmen S.S.R. He was also first secretary of the party committee of Chardzhou oblast (1959-62).
Gara, Jean-Robert (b. 1957, Antsiranana), governor of Antsiranana (2001-02). When the forces of Pres. Marc Ravalomanana took over, he fled to Moroni, Comoros. In 2003 he was sentenced in absentia to five years in prison for proclaiming the independence of his province during the 2002 political crisis.
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Garango, Ti閙oko Marc (b. July 27, 1927, Gaoua, Upper Volta [now Burkina Faso] - d. March 6, 2015, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso), finance minister of Upper Volta (1966-76). He was also ambassador to Taiwan (non-resident, 1966-73), West Germany (1977-81), and the United States (1981-83) and ombudsman (1994-2000).
Garapich, Pawel (b. Nov. 18, 1882, Cebr體, Austria [now Tsebriv, Ukraine] - d. 1957, Pulawy, Poland), governor of L骴zkie (1922-23 [acting], 1924) and Lwowskie (1924-27) wojew骴ztwa.
Garasanin, Ilija (b. Jan. 28 [Jan. 16, O.S.], 1812, Garasi, Serbia - d. June 22 [June 10, O.S.], 1874, Belgrade, Serbia), interior minister (1843-52, 1858) and prime minister and foreign minister (1852-53, 1861-67) of Serbia.
Garasanin, Milutin (b. Feb. 22 [Feb. 10, O.S.], 1843 - d. March 5, 1898, Paris, France), prime minister (1884-87) and foreign minister (1884-86) of Serbia; son of Ilija Garasanin. He was also interior minister (1880-83, 1886-87), minister to Austria-Hungary (1883-84) and France (1894-95), and president of the National Assembly (1895-96).
Garay D韆z, Narciso (b. June 12, 1876, Panama City, Colombia [now in Panama] - d. March 27, 1953, Panama City), foreign minister of Panama (1916-18, 1921-24, 1938-40). He was also minister to France (1925, 1931-33), Cuba and Mexico (1926-28), Germany (1929-31), the United Kingdom (1931-33), and Colombia (1940-44), minister of education (1934-36) and labour, commerce, and industries (1936-38), and ambassador to Ecuador (1944-46) and Costa Rica (1947-49).
Garba, Joseph Nanven (b. July 17, 1943, Langtang [now in Plateau state], northern Nigeria - d. June 1, 2002, Abuja, Nigeria), foreign minister of Nigeria (1975-78) and president of the UN General Assembly (1989-90). He spent nearly two decades in Nigeria's military before serving as foreign minister under consecutive military regimes led by Murtala Mohammed and Olusegun Obasanjo. He went on to become Nigeria's permanent representative to the United Nations (1984-89) and chaired a UN committee dedicated to fighting South African white-minority rule.
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Garba-Jahumpa, Ibrahima Momodou (b. Nov. 22, 1912, Bathurst [now Banjul], Gambia - d. Sept. 4, 1994, Banjul), finance and trade minister of The Gambia (1972-77). He was also minister of agriculture and natural resources (1954-60), health (1968-72), and education (1970-72).
Garbai, S醤dor (b. March 6, 1879, Kiskunhalas, Hungary - d. Nov. 11, 1947, Paris, France), chairman of the Central Executive Council (1919) and of the Revolutionary Government Council (1919) of Hungary. He was also education minister (1919).
Garbit, Hubert (Auguste) (b. April 4, 1869, Lyon, France - d. Oct. 30, 1933, Giron, Ain, France), governor of R閡nion (1912-13) and governor-general of Madagascar (1909-10 [acting], 1914-17, 1920-23).
Garbuzov, Vasily (Fyodorovich) (b. July 3 [June 20, O.S.], 1911, Belgorod, Russia - d. Nov. 12, 1985, Moscow, Russian S.F.S.R.), Soviet finance minister (1960-85). He was also chairman of the State Planning Committee of the Ukrainian S.S.R. (1950-52).
Garc閟 Gana, Francisco (b. Sept. 1, 1879, Santiago, Chile - d. May 12, 1948), finance minister (1920, 1921-22, 1931, 1937-38), interior minister (1923), and justice minister (1935-36) of Chile.
Garcez, Arnaldo Rollemberg (b. Jan. 19, 1911, Itaporanga, Sergipe, Brazil - d. Sept. 7, 2010, Aracaju, Sergipe), governor of Sergipe (1951-55).
Garcez, Jo鉶 de Andrade (b. 1927? - d. Nov. 11, 2001), governor of Sergipe (1970-71).
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Garc韆 Capurro, Federico (b. Feb. 25, 1907, Montevideo, Uruguay - d. 2000), defense minister of Uruguay (1971-72). He was also minister of health (1952-55), culture (1968-70), and transport (1971-72).
Garc韆 Carneiro, Jorge Luis (b. Feb. 8, 1952, Caracas, Venezuela), defense minister of Venezuela (2004-05) and governor of Vargas/La Guaira (2008- ). He was also minister of social development and popular participation (2005-07).
Garc韆 Correa, Bartolom?/B> (b. April 2, 1893, Um醤, Yucat醤, Mexico - d. Dec. 17, 1978, Tecom醤, Colima, Mexico), governor of Yucat醤 (1930-34).
Garc韆 de la Cadena, (Jos? Trinidad (b. Nov. 15, 1823, Villa del Refugio [now Tabasco], Zacatecas, Mexico - d. [executed] Nov. 1, 1886, Estaci髇 Gonz醠ez [now Estaci髇 Opal], Zacatecas), governor of Zacatecas (1868-70, 1876-80) and interior minister (1877-79) and finance minister (1879-80) of Mexico.
Garc韆 de la Huerta Izquierdo, Manuel (b. Oct. 29, 1868, Santiago, Chile - d. January 1940?, Santiago), finance minister of Chile (1915). He was also mayor of San Bernardo (1906-09).
Garc韆 de la Huerta Izquierdo, Pedro (b. Dec. 29, 1869, Santiago, Chile - d. 19...), finance minister (1913) and interior minister (1920) of Chile; brother of Manuel Garc韆 de la Huerta Izquierdo. He was also minister of industry and public works (1909).
Garc韆 de Polavieja y del Castillo, Camilo, marqu閟 de Polavieja (b. July 13, 1838, Madrid, Spain - d. Jan. 15, 1914, Madrid), governor of Cuba (1890-92) and governor-general of the Philippines (1896-97).
Garc韆 del R韔, Juan (b. 1794, Cartagena, New Granada [now in Colombia] - d. May 15, 1856, Mexico City, Mexico), foreign minister of Peru (1821) and Colombia (1831) and finance minister of Ecuador (1832-34) and North Peru (1836-37).
Garc韆 del Solar, Lucio (Alberto Saturnino) (b. Jan. 31, 1922, Mar del Plata, Argentina - d. Nov. 26, 2010, Buenos Aires, Argentina), Argentine diplomat. He was permanent representative to the United Nations (1962-66) and ambassador to the Soviet Union (1966) and the United States (1982-86).
Garc韆 Feraud, Galo (b. Aug. 30, 1934, Guayaquil, Ecuador), interior minister of Ecuador (1981-83). He was also minister of education and culture (1979-81).
Garc韆-Gallont (Bischof), Fritz (b. Aug. 9, 1955, Guatemala City, Guatemala), Guatemalan politician. He was minister of communications (1996-99), mayor of Guatemala City (2000-03), and a minor presidential candidate (2003, 2007).
Garc韆 Garc韆, Arturo (b. May 3, 1914, Lima, Peru - d. October 2004), foreign minister of Peru (1979-80); son of Arturo Garc韆 Salazar. He was also ambassador to Ecuador (1964-65, 1977-79), Chile (1968-70), Italy (1974-77), and the United Kingdom (1992-95).
Garc韆 Godoy (C醕eres), H閏tor (Federico) (b. Jan. 11, 1921, Moca, Dominican Republic - d. April 20, 1970, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic), foreign minister (1963) and provisional president (1965-66) of the Dominican Republic. He was also ambassador to the United States (1966-69).
Garc韆 Gonz醠ez, Andelfo (Jos?, Colombian diplomat. He has been charg?d'affaires at the United Nations (1997-98) and ambassador to Thailand (2013- ) and Myanmar (2014- ).
Garc韆 Gonz醠ez, Carlos Enrique (b. Aug. 22, 1966, San Salvador, El Salvador), Salvadoran diplomat. He was permanent representative to the United Nations (2013-14).
Garc韆 Goyena, Florencio (b. Oct. 27, 1783, Tafalla, Navarra, Spain - d. June 2, 1855, Madrid, Spain), prime minister and justice minister of Spain (1847).
Garc韆 Granados, Jorge (b. April 21, 1900, Villa Nueva, Guatemala - d. May 3, 1961, Santiago, Chile), Guatemalan presidential candidate (1950); grandson of Miguel Garc韆 Granados. He was also president of the National Congress (1945), ambassador to the United States (1945-47) and Israel (1955-56), permanent representative to the United Nations (1947-48), and minister to the United Kingdom (1956-57).
Garc韆 Granados (y Zavala), Miguel (b. Sept. 29, 1809, El Puerto de Santa Mar韆, Spain - d. Sept. 8, 1878, Guatemala City, Guatemala), president of Guatemala (1871-73).
Garc韆 Hern醤dez, Jos?/B> (b. March 19, 1915, Guadalajara, Spain - d. Feb. 5, 2000, Madrid, Spain), first deputy prime minister and interior minister of Spain (1974-75). He was also civil governor of Lugo (1947-48) and Las Palmas (1948-51).
Garc韆 Inch醬stegui, Mario (b. September 1924, Havana, Cuba - d. [plane crash] Dec. 6, 1977, near Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia), Cuban diplomat. He was ambassador to Uruguay (1959-61), Chile (1971-73), and Japan and Malaysia (1974-77) and permanent representative to the United Nations (1961-62).
Garc韆 Kohly, Mario (b. Jan. 18, 1876, Havana, Spain - d. July 22, 1935, Madrid, Spain), Cuban politician. He was minister of education and fine arts (1910-13) and ambassador to Spain (1913-33).
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Garc韆 Medina, Amalia (Dolores) (b. Oct. 6, 1951, Zacatecas, Zacatecas, Mexico), governor of Zacatecas (2004-10); daughter of Francisco E. Garc韆. She was also president of the Party of the Democratic Revolution (1999-2002).
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Garc韆 Paniagua, Javier (b. Feb. 13, 1935, Casimiro Castillo, Jalisco, Mexico - d. Nov. 24, 1998, Guadalajara, Jalisco), Mexican politician; son of Marcelino Garc韆 Barrag醤. He was minister of agrarian reform (1980-81) and labour and social security (1981) and president of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (1981).
Garc韆 Parra, Jaime (b. Dec. 19, 1931, Bucaramanga, Colombia), finance minister of Colombia (1978-81). He was also minister of communications (1974-75) and mines and energy (1975-77) and ambassador to the United Kingdom (1977-78) and the United States (1991-93).
Garc韆 Ram韗ez, Sergio (b. Feb. 1, 1938, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico), Mexican politician. He was minister of labour and social security (1981-82) and attorney general (1982-88).
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Garc韆 Rodr韌uez, Ricardo (b. Nov. 20, 1930, Santiago, Chile), interior minister (1985-87) and foreign minister (1987-88) of Chile.
Garc韆 Salazar, Arturo (b. Jan. 26, 1886, Lima, Peru - d. June 7, 1958, Lima), foreign minister of Peru (1918-19). He was also minister to Ecuador (1930-36) and ambassador to Colombia (1938-40), Chile (1940-45), the Vatican (1946-48), and France (1948-50).
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Garc韆 Say醤, Enrique (V韈tor Aurelio) (b. March 6, 1905, Lima, Peru - d. June 30, 1978), foreign minister of Peru (1946-48); grandson of Aurelio Garc韆 y Garc韆; grandson-in-law of Eugenio Larrabure y Unanue.
Garc韆 Sol? Manuel (Guillermo) (b. Nov. 14, 1953, Santa Fe, Santa Fe province, Argentina), education minister of Argentina (1999).
Garc韆 T閘lez, Ignacio (b. May 21, 1897, Le髇, Guanajuato, Mexico - d. Nov. 14, 1985, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico), governor of Guanajuato (1923) and interior minister of Mexico (1938-40). He was also minister of education (1934-35) and labour (1940-43) and attorney general (1936-37).
Garc韆 Urrutia (y Muro), Baltasar (b. 1838, Lambayeque, Peru - d. Jan. 11, 1899, Lima, Peru), foreign minister (1884-85, 1894) and prime minister (1894) of Peru.
Garc韆 Vargas, Juli醤 (b. Oct. 19, 1945, Madrid, Spain), defense minister of Spain (1991-95). He was also minister of health and consumer affairs (1986-91).
Garc韆 Velasco, Rafael (b. Jan. 15, 1923, Quito, Ecuador), foreign minister of Ecuador (1971-72, 1987-88). He was also ambassador to Peru (1968-71), Canada (1981-83), and the United States (1983-84).
Garc韆 Velutini, 觭car (b. Feb. 24, 1911, Caracas, Venezuela - d. June 12, 1991), foreign minister of Venezuela (1958).
Garc韆-Verdugo Cand髇, Jos?Manuel (b. March 27, 1935, M醠aga, Andaluc韆, Spain), president of the General Council of Castilla-L閛n (1980-83).
Garc韆 y Garc韆, Aurelio (b. Nov. 28, 1834, Lima, Peru - d. June 25, 1888, Callao, Peru), acting foreign minister (1881, 1881) and prime minister (1881) of Peru; brother of Jos?Antonio Garc韆 y Garc韆. He was also minister of interior and public works (1875-76) and mayor of Lima (1877).
Garc韆 y Garc韆, Jos?Antonio (b. 1832, Lima, Peru - d. Nov. 2, 1886, Lima), foreign minister of Peru (1876-77). He was also charg?d'affaires in Colombia (1862-65) and the United States (1865-66), minister to the United States (1867-69), mayor of Lima (1872), and president of the Senate (1878-79).
G鋜de, August Bernhard (b. June 4, 1877, Seglora, 膌vsborg [now in V鋝tra G鰐aland], Sweden - d. March 11, 1970), governor of Norrbotten (1928-37) and V鋝tmanland (1937-43).
Garde, Fran鏾is (b. Oct. 13, 1959, Le Cannet Rocheville, Alpes-Maritimes, France), administrator-superior of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands (2000-05).
G鋜de, (Johannes) Natanael (b. July 27, 1880, Seglora, 膌vsborg [now in V鋝tra G鰐aland], Sweden - d. Jan. 28, 1968, Stockholm, Sweden), justice minister of Sweden (1930-32).
Gardey, Abel (Justin Joseph Marie) (b. Nov. 21, 1882, Margou雝-Meymes, Gers, France - d. Sept. 23, 1957, Pouylebon, Gers), justice minister of France (1932-33). He was also minister of agriculture (1932) and budget (1933).
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Gardner, Anthony William (b. 1820, Virginia, U.S. - d. 1885), president of Liberia (1878-83). He was also attorney-general (1848-55) and vice president (1872-76); when Pres. Joseph Jenkins Roberts became very ill and left for England for medical treatment in June 1875, he was appointed acting president.
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Garfield, James R(udolph) (b. Oct. 17, 1865, Hiram, Ohio - d. March 24, 1950, Cleveland, Ohio), U.S. secretary of the interior (1907-09); son of James A. Garfield.
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Gargar, Marcel (b. July 19, 1911, Pointe-?Pitre, Guadeloupe - d. Dec. 24, 2004), president of the Regional Council of Guadeloupe (1982-83).
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Garicano Go駃, Tom醩 (b. Feb. 19, 1910, Pamplona, Spain - d. Jan. 17, 1988, Madrid, Spain), interior minister of Spain (1969-73). He was also civil governor of Guip鷝coa (1951-56) and Barcelona (1966-69).
Garin, Vasco Vieira (b. June 23, 1907, Lisbon, Portugal), Portuguese diplomat. He was minister to India (1949-55), permanent representative to the United Nations (1956-63), and ambassador to Canada (1956-59) and the United States (1964-71).
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Garner, John N(ance), byname Cactus Jack (b. Nov. 22, 1868, Blossom Prairie, Red River county, Texas - d. Nov. 7, 1967, Uvalde, Texas), speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1931-33) and vice president (1933-41).
Garnier, (Marius) Albert (b. Nov. 4, 1870, Remollon, Hautes-Alpes, France - d. June 3, 1929, Paris, France), administrator of Kwangchowan (1915-17).
Garnier, Claude L閛n (Lucien), acting resident-superior of Laos (1913, 1914-18).
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Garnier-Mouton, Gabriel Samuel (b. Oct. 31, 1864, Cognac, Charente, France - d. 19...), administrator of Mayotte (1911-12) and the Comoros (1912-13).
Garnier-Pag鑣, Louis Antoine (b. July 10, 1803, Marseille, France - d. Oct. 30, 1878, Paris, France), finance minister of France (1848). He was also mayor of Paris (1848) and a member of the Government of National Defense (1870-71).
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Garotinho, Rosinha, byname of Rosangela Barros Assed Matheus de Oliveira (b. April 6, 1963, Itaperuna, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil), governor of Rio de Janeiro (2003-07); wife of Anthony Garotinho.
Garraud, Gustave Aristide L閛pold (b. Sept. 15, 1820, Toulon, France - d. ...), commandant-particular of Gabon (1871-73).
Garr? Nilda (Celia) (b. Nov. 3, 1945, Buenos Aires, Argentina), defense minister of Argentina (2005-10). She was also ambassador to Venezuela (2005) and minister of security (2010-13).
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Garret Ayll髇, Julio (b. May 22, 1925, Sucre, Bolivia - d. March 19, 2018, Sucre), foreign minister (1979-80) and vice president (1985-89) of Bolivia. He was also ambassador to the U.S.S.R. (1969-73), Czechoslovakia (1973-74), and Argentina (1995-97) and president of the Senate (1982-85).
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Garrido Canabal, Tom醩 (b. Sept. 20, 1891, Catazaj? Chiapas, Mexico - d. April 8, 1943, Los Angeles, Calif.), governor of Yucat醤 (1920) and Tabasco (1921-24, 1926, 1931-34). He was also Mexican minister of agriculture and development (1934-35).
Garrido Patr髇, Francisco (b. Nov. 23, 1953, Mexico City, Mexico), governor of Quer閠aro (2003-09). He was also mayor of Quer閠aro (1997-2000).
Garrigues y D韆z-Ca馻bate, Antonio (b. Jan. 9, 1904, Madrid, Spain - d. Feb. 24, 2004, Madrid), justice minister of Spain (1975-76). He was also ambassador to the United States (1962-64) and the Vatican (1964-72).
Garrioch, Sir (William) Henry (b. May 4, 1916 - d. Feb. 18, 2008), acting governor-general of Mauritius (1977-78); knighted 1977.
Garrouste, Pierre (Marie Charles Fran鏾is) (b. Oct. 22, 1900 - d. June 30, 1969), administrator of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon (1943-46).
Garsia, Rupert C(lare) (b. Oct. 9, 1887, Christchurch, New Zealand - d. Feb. 18, 1954, Canberra, Australia), administrator of Nauru (1933-38).
Garting, Ivan (Markovich), Dutch Johan Festus Hartingh (b. 1768 - d. 1831), governor of Bessarabia (1813-17); brother-in-law of Mihai Grigore Sturza.
Gartman, Vladimir (Karlovich) (b. Aug. 18, 1947, Aganas, Akmolinsk [now Akmola] oblast, Kazakh S.S.R.), head of Severo-Kazakhstan oblast (1992-97) and Akmola oblast (1997-98). He was also chairman of the Executive Committee of Uralsk oblast (1989-92).
Gartner (de la Cuesta), Jorge (b. Dec. 17, 1890, Riosucio, Caldas, Colombia - d. June 28, 1982), interior minister of Colombia (1940-42). He was also governor of Caldas (1931-34) and minister of national economy (1938-40).
Gartz, 舓e (Henrik) (b. June 9, 1888, Helsingfors [now Helsinki], Finland - d. Nov. 29, 1974, Karis [now part of Raseborg], Finland), foreign minister of Finland (1950-51). He was also minister of trade and industry (1944-46) and ambassador to Switzerland (1951-53) and the Soviet Union and Romania (1953-55).
Garu, Moses (b. Dec. 1, 1969), Solomon Islands politician. He was minister of mines, energy, and rural electrification (2011-14), lands, housing, and survey (2015-17), police and national security (2017, 2017-19), and home affairs (2017).
Garuba, Chris (Abutu) (b. April 8, 1948, Ipole-Otukpa [now in Benue state], Nigeria), governor of Bauchi (1985-87).
Garza, Arturo B(onifacio) de la (b. May 14, 1905, General Bravo, Nuevo Le髇, Mexico - d. 1952, Mexico City, Mexico), governor of Nuevo Le髇 (1943-49).
Garza Aldape, Manuel (b. April 29, 1871, M鷝quiz, Coahuila, Mexico - d. Feb. 28, 1924, Mexico City, Mexico), acting foreign minister (1913) and interior minister (1913-14) of Mexico. He was also minister of education and fine arts (1913).
Garz髇 (Quintero), Angelino (b. Oct. 29, 1946, Buga, Valle del Cauca, Colombia), vice president of Colombia (2010-14). He has also been minister of labour and social security (2000-01), governor of Valle del Cauca (2004-08), and ambassador to Costa Rica (2019- ).
Garz髇, Luis Eduardo, byname Lucho Garz髇 (b. Feb. 15, 1951, Bogot? Colombia), Colombian presidential candidate (2002). He was also mayor of Bogot?(2004-07), minister counselor for social dialogue (2012-14), and minister of labour (2014-16).
Gasana, Anastase (b. Aug. 5, 1950, Gikomero, near Kigali, Rwanda), foreign minister of Rwanda (1993-94, 1994-99). He also served as ambassador to the United States (1994) and permanent representative to the United Nations (2001-03). He served as one of the negotiators and signatories of the 1993 Arusha Peace Agreement.
Gasana, Eug鑞e-Richard (b. July 2, 1962, Bujumbura, Burundi), Rwandan diplomat. He was charg?d'affaires in Germany (1994-95) and Switzerland (1995-97), ambassador to Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, Russia, Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Romania (2004-09), and permanent representative to the United Nations (2009-16).
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Gasfort, Gustav (Khristianovich) (b. April 12 [April 1, O.S.], 1794, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth - d. May 17 [May 5, O.S.], 1874, St. Petersburg, Russia), governor-general of West Siberia (1851-61).
Gaspar, Alfredo Rodrigues (b. Aug. 8, 1865, Funchal, Madeira, Portugal - d. Dec. 1, 1938, Lisbon, Portugal), prime minister of Portugal (1924). He was also minister of colonies (1914-15, 1915-16, 1919-20, 1922-23), navy (1919-20), interior (1924), and agriculture (1924).
Gaspari, Remo (b. July 10, 1921, Gissi, Chieti province, Italy - d. July 19, 2011, Gissi), defense minister of Italy (1987). He was also minister of transport and civil aviation (1969-70), health (1972-73), and posts and telecommunications (1981-83) and minister without portfolio (reform of public administration 1970-72; relations with parliament 1980; civil service 1983-87, 1989-92; coordination of civil protection 1987-88; special intervention in the Mezzogiorno 1988-89).
Gasparin, Adrien (蓆ienne Pierre) de (b. June 29, 1783, Orange, Vaucluse, France - d. Sept. 7, 1862, Orange), interior minister of France (1836-37, 1839). He was also prefect of the d閜artements of Loire (1830), Is鑢e (1830-31), and Rh鬾e (1831-35) and minister of public works, agriculture, and commerce (1839).
Gasparotto, Luigi (b. May 31, 1873, Sacile, Udine province, Italy - d. June 29, 1954, Cantello, Varese province, Italy), war minister (1921-22) and defense minister (1947) of Italy. He was also minister of postwar assistance (1945-46).
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Gasparri, Pietro Cardinal (b. May 5, 1852, Capovallazza di Ussita, Italy - d. Nov. 18, 1934, Rome, Italy), Vatican secretary of state (1914-30). He was also apostolic delegate to Peru (1898-1901) and chamberlain (1916-34). He became cardinal in 1907.
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Gasperoni, Ermenegildo, byname Gildo Gasperoni (b. Aug. 4, 1906 - d. June 26, 1994), captain-regent of San Marino (1978-79).
Gasperoni, Pier Paolo (b. June 29, 1950 - d. [car crash] July 1997), captain-regent of San Marino (1985-86, 1996).
Gasser Vargas, Alberto (Werner) (b. April 1, 1953, Cochabamba, Bolivia), interior minister of Bolivia (2002-03). He was also prefect of Cochabamba (1995-97).
Gassiyev, Znaur (Nikolayevich) (b. March 17, 1925, Tskhinvali, South Ossetian autonomous oblast, Georgian S.S.R. - d. March 6, 2016), first secretary of the Communist Party committee (1991) and chairman of the Executive Committee (1991) of the South Ossetian autonomous oblast and chairman of the parliament of South Ossetia (1991-92, 2004-09).
Gast閘um (Izabal), Bernardo J(os? (b. Nov. 4, 1886, Culiac醤, Sinaloa, Mexico - d. Dec. 21, 1981, Mexico City, Mexico), Mexican politician. He was ambassador to Paraguay and Uruguay (1922-23) and Italy and Hungary (1929-30) and education minister (1924).
Gaston Marin, Gheorghe, original name Gheorghe Grossmann (b. April 14, 1918, Padureni, Hungary [now part of Chisineu-Cris, Arad county, Romania] - d. Feb. 25, 2010, Bucharest, Romania), a deputy premier of Romania (1962-69). He was also minister of electric power (1949-54) and electrotechnical industry (1951-54) and chairman of the State Planning Committee (1956-65) and the State Committee for Prices (1969-82).
Gastorn, Kennedy Godfrey (b. Dec. 25, 1976, Tanzania), Tanzanian diplomat. He has been permanent representative to the United Nations (2020- ).
Gasymov, Tofik (Masim ogly) (b. April 10, 1938, Lyaki village, Agdash district, Azerbaijan S.S.R. - d. Jan. 26, 2020, Luzern, Switzerland), foreign minister of Azerbaijan (1992-93). Arrested in 1995 on charges of involvement in a coup attempt, he was released in 1996 and went into exile.
Gata Mavita wa Lufuta, Ignace (b. Jan. 7, 1949, Popokabaka, L閛poldville province, Belgian Congo [now in Kwango province, Congo (Kinshasa)]), Congo (Kinshasa) politician. He has been minister of regional integration (2007) and permanent representative to the United Nations (2012- ).
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Gauci, Victor J(oseph) (b. April 25, 1931, Sliema, Malta - d. Oct. 4, 2018, Malta), Maltese diplomat. He was permanent representative to the United Nations (1978-85), high commissioner to Australia (1987-91) and New Zealand (1988-92), and ambassador to Japan (1987-95), South Korea (1988-95), and China (1994-95).
Gauck, Joachim (b. Jan. 24, 1940, Rostock, Germany), president of Germany (2012-17). In 1990-2000 he was commissioner for the records of the former East German Ministry of State Security ("Stasi").
Gaudard, (Marie Antoine) Edmond, acting governor of Senegal (1909).
Gaudin, Michel (b. Aug. 9, 1948, Cosne-sur-Loire, Ni鑦re, France), prefect of police of Paris (2007-12). He was also prefect of Gard d閜artement (1998-2002).
Gauger, Robert (b. Feb. 2, 1925 - d. Feb. 8, 1995), French resident commissioner of the New Hebrides (1974-78).
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Gaulle, Pierre (Julien Joseph Marie) de (b. March 22, 1897, Paris, France - d. Dec. 26, 1959, Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris), president of the Municipal Council of Paris (1947-51); brother of Charles de Gaulle.
Gaultier de la Richerie, (Louis) Eug鑞e (b. June 12, 1820, Fort-de-France, Martinique - d. June 29, 1886, Lorient, Morbihan, France), governor (1858-60) and commandant (1860-64) of the French Settlements in Oceania and governor of New Caledonia (1870-74).
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Gauthier de Rougemont, Nicolas Martial (Adolphe) (b. Sept. 28, 1794, Saint-Quentin, France - d. 18...), conservator of the French possessions on St. Helena (1858-67).
Gautier, Ange (Simon), interim commandant of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon (1855-56).
Gautier, Georges Armand L閛n (b. April 11, 1901, Boulogne-sur-Mer, France - d. April 27, 1987), resident-superior of Cambodia (1943-44).
Gautier, Jean-蒷ie (b. Oct. 6, 1781, Bordeaux, France - d. Jan. 30, 1858, Paris, France), finance minister of France (1839).
Gautret, Jean-Fernand (Edm? (b. Jan. 5, 1862, Saint-Genis-de-Saintonge, Charente-Inf閞ieure [now Charente-Maritime], France - d. Aug. 1, 1912, Paris, France), administrator of Kwangchowan (1906-08).
Gautrey, Peter (b. Sept. 17, 1918 - d. Feb. 7, 2014), British high commissioner of Brunei (1972-75). He was also high commissioner to Swaziland (1968-71) and Guyana (1975-78) and ambassador to Suriname (1976-78).
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Gava, Antonio (b. July 30, 1930, Castellammare di Stabia, Napoli province, Italy - d. Aug. 8, 2008, Rome, Italy), finance minister (1987-88) and interior minister (1988-90) of Italy; son of Silvio Gava. He was also minister without portfolio (relations with parliament) (1980-81) and minister of posts and telecommunications (1983-87).
Gava, Silvio (b. April 25, 1901, Vittorio Veneto, Italy - d. Dec. 23, 1999, Rome, Italy), treasury minister of Italy (1953-56). He was also minister of industry and commerce (1953, 1957-58, 1970-72) and justice (1968-70) and minister without portfolio (reform of public administration) (1972-74).
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Gavard, Alexandre (b. March 25, 1845, Perly-Certoux, Gen鑦e, Switzerland - d. Nov. 29, 1898, Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France), president of the Council of State of Gen鑦e (1883-84, 1885-86, 1887-88, 1897-98) and president of the Council of States of Switzerland (1887-88).
Gaven, Yury (Petrovich), original name Yan (Ernestovich) Dauman, Latvian Janis Daumanis (b. March 18 [March 6, O.S.], 1884, Bikern hamlet, Livonia province, Russia [now in Latvia] - d. [executed] Oct. 4, 1936), provisional chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the Crimean S.S.R. (1919) and chairman of the Central Executive Committee of the Crimean A.S.S.R. (1921-24).
Gavillet, Andr?/B> (b. Sept. 25, 1924, Lausanne, Switzerland - d. July 14/15, 2014, Lausanne), president of the Council of State of Vaud (1975).
Gavira (Castro), Gabriel (b. March 18, 1867, Mexico City, Mexico - d. July 15, 1956, Mexico City), governor of San Luis Potos?(1915), Durango (1916-17), and Baja California (1936).
Gaviria D韆z, Carlos (b. May 8, 1937, Sopetr醤, Antioquia, Colombia - d. March 31, 2015, Bogot? Colombia), Colombian presidential candidate (2006).
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Gavric, Miroslav (b. Jan. 15, 1971, Brcko, Bosnia and Herzegovina), mayor of Brcko (2011-12).
Gavriil I, secular name Grigory (Fyodorovich) Kremenetsky (b. Dec. 1 [Nov. 20, O.S.], 1711 [or 1708?], Nosovka, Russia [now in Ukraine] - d. Aug. 20 [Aug. 9, O.S.], 1783, Kiev, Russia [now in Ukraine]), metropolitan of St. Petersburg (1762-70) and Kiev (1770-83). He was also bishop of Kolomna (1749-55) and Kazan (1755-62).
Gavriil II, secular name Pyotr (Petrovich) Petrov-Shaposhnikov (b. May 29 [May 18, O.S.], 1730, Moscow, Russia - d. Feb. 7 [Jan. 26, O.S.], 1801, Novgorod, Russia), metropolitan of St. Petersburg (1770-99). He was also bishop of Tver (1763-70) and metropolitan of Novgorod (1799-1800).
Gavriil II, secular name Grigory (Grigoryevich) Benulesku-Bodoni, Romanian Grigorie Banulescu-Bodoni (b. 1746, Bistrita, Transylvania [now in Romania] - d. April 11 [March 30, O.S.], 1821, Kishinev, Russia [now Chisinau, Moldova]), metropolitan of Kiev (1799-1803). He was also bishop of Bendery (1792) and Yekaterinoslav (1793-99), exarch of Moldavia, Walachia, and Bessarabia (1792, 1808-13), and metropolitan of Kishinev (1813-21). He was canonized by the Orthodox Church of Moldova in 2016.
Gavril (b. 1921 - d. March 4, 1996, Skopje, Macedonia [now North Macedonia]), archbishop of Ohrid, head of the Macedonian Orthodox Church (1986-93). He attempted to resign on several occasions beginning in December 1991, but his resignation was not officially accepted by the Holy Synod until June 1993.
Gavrilovic, Mihailo (b. May 8, 1868, Aleksinac, Serbia - d. Nov. 1, 1924, London, England), acting foreign minister of Serbia (1918). He was also minister to Montenegro (1910-14), the Vatican (1914-17), Russia (1917-18), and the United Kingdom (1919-24).
Gavriyski, Svetoslav (Veleslavov) (b. Dec. 18, 1948, Svishtov, Bulgaria), finance minister of Bulgaria (1997). He was also governor of the Bulgarian National Bank (1997-2003).
Gawler, George (b. July 21, 1795, Devon, England - d. May 7, 1869, Southsea, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England), governor of South Australia (1838-41).
Gaya, Kabiru (Ibrahim) (b. 1953), governor of Kano (1992-93).
Gayama, Pascal, Congo (Brazzaville) diplomat. He was permanent representative to the United Nations (2007-08).
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Gaye, Amadou Karim (b. Nov. 8, 1913, Saint-Louis, Senegal - d. Oct. 2, 2000), foreign minister of Senegal (1968-72) and secretary-general of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (1975-80). He was also minister of planning, development, and technical cooperation (1960-61), assistance and technical cooperation (1961-62), civil service and labour (1962), rural economy (1962-65), and the armed forces (1965-68).
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Gaylani, Rashid Ali al-, Arabic Rashid `Ali al-Kaylani (b. 1892, Baghdad, Iraq - d. Aug. 28, 1965, Beirut, Lebanon), prime minister (1933, 1940-41, 1941), justice minister (1924-25, 1935-36), and interior minister (1925, 1926-28, 1935-36, 1940-41, 1941) of Iraq.
Gaymard, Herv?/B> (b. May 31, 1960, Bourg-Saint-Maurice, Savoie, France), French politician. He was minister of agriculture, food, and rural affairs (2002-04) and of economy, finances, and industry (2004-05). He resigned the latter post after it was revealed that he was renting a 600-sq-m apartment just off the Champs-蒷ys閑s in Paris for 14,000 euros ($18,460) a month at taxpayer's expense.
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Gayrbekov, Muslim (Gayrbekovich) (b. 1911 - d. June 20, 1971, Grozny, Chechen-Ingush A.S.S.R., Russian S.F.S.R.), chairman of the Organizing Committee (1957-58) and of the Council of Ministers (1958-71) of the Chechen-Ingush A.S.S.R.
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Gazc髇 Mercado, Juli醤 (b. 1925, Tepic, Nayarit), governor of Nayarit (1964-69).
Gazioglu, Beytullah Mehmet (b. 1944, Orhaneli, Bursa, Turkey), interior minister of Turkey (1993). He was also a minister of state (1993).
Gazzayev, Vladimir (Isakovich) (b. 1918), chairman of the Executive Committee of the South Ossetian autonomous oblast (1961-62?).
Gbadebo I (b. 1854 - d. May 28, 1920), Alake of Abeokuta (1898-1920).
Gbadebo II, Adesiinan Samuel (b. 1908 - d. Oct. 26, 1971), Alake of Abeokuta (1963-71); son of Gbadebo I.
Gbadebo III, Adedotun Aremu (b. Sept. 14, 1943), Alake of Abeokuta (2005- ); grandson of Gbadebo I; nephew of Adesiinan Samuel Gbadebo II.
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Gbedemah, Komla Agbeli, byname Afro Gbede (b. June 17, 1913, Warri, Nigeria - d. July 11, 1998), finance minister of Gold Coast/Ghana (1954-61). He was also minister of health and labour (1951), commerce and industry (1952-54), and health (1961).
Gb鑔o, (Akouavi) Marie-Elise (Christiana) (b. Dec. 29, 1954, Mankono, Ivory Coast [now C魌e d'Ivoire]), justice minister of Benin (2011-13). She was also minister of commerce, crafts, and tourism (1998-99) and industry and commerce (2013) and a minor presidential candidate (2001, 2006, 2011, 2016).
Gbegan, Antoine Alabi (b. June 1946), interior minister of Benin (1993-96). He was also minister of civil service and administrative reform (1991-93).
Gbehanzin (throne name), personal name Kondo, praise name Xadakogundo (b. 1844 - d. Dec. 10, 1906, Blida, Algeria), king of Danhome (1889-94). He was deposed by the French on Dec. 3, 1893, but only captured on Jan. 26, 1894.
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Gbenou, Gr間oire Gilbert (b. Feb. 13, 1926, Adjohoun, Dahomey [now Benin]), justice minister of Dahomey (1966-67).
Gbenye, Christophe (b. 1927, Bas-U閘?district, Orientale province, Belgian Congo [now Congo (Kinshasa)] - d. Feb. 2/3, 2015, Kinshasa, Congo [Kinshasa]), interior minister (1960, 1961-62, and in the Antoine Gizenga rebel government in 1960-61) and deputy prime minister (1962-63) of Congo (L閛poldville), and president (1964-65) and chairman of the Revolutionary Government (1965) of the People's Republic of the Congo. He fled the Congo in November 1964 and lived in exile in Kampala, Uganda, in 1966-71.
Gbezera-Bria, Michel (b. 1946, Bossangoa, Oubangui-Chari [now Central African Republic]), foreign minister (1977-78, 1988-90, 1996-97) and prime minister (1997-99) of the Central African Empire/Republic. He has also been minister of civil service, labour, and social security (1976-77), public works and social security (1978-79), justice (1987-88), and presidential affairs (1999-2001), permanent representative to the United Nations (1983-87), and ambassador to France (2015- ).
Gbian, Jonas (Aliou) (b. March 25, 1965, Ina, Borgou d閜artement, Dahomey [now Benin]), finance minister of Benin (2012-14). He was also minister of energy, water, and mines (2011-12).
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