1973 in Argentina
Appearance
Events in the year 1973 in Argentina.
Incumbents
- President: Alejandro Agustín Lanusse until May 24, Héctor Cámpora until July 13, Raúl Lastiri until October 11, Juan Peron
- Vice President: Isabel Martínez de Perón
Events
- January 10 - San Justo tornado
- March 11 - Argentine general election, March 1973: Héctor Cámpora is elected as the new President.
- May 25 - President Héctor Cámpora is inaugurated, in the presence of Chilean President Salvador Allende and Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticós. An estimated million people gather on the Plaza de Mayo to welcome him.[1]
- June 20 - Ezeiza massacre: Former president Juan Perón returns to Argentina. His plane has to be redirected to a military airport because of fighting between armed Peronist factions that have massed to greet his arrival at Buenos Aires's main airport. This event, known as the Ezeiza Massacre, left 13 dead and more than 300 injured.
- July 13 - President Héctor Cámpora resigns from office in order to allow Juan Perón to return to power.
- September 23 - Argentine general election, September 1973: The second general election is held, following the resignation of Vice President Vicente Solano Lima and Senate President Alejandro Díaz Bialet. The runners-up in the March elections — Ricardo Balbín (UCR) and Francisco Manrique (APF) — again accepted their respective parties' nominations, with Manrique obtaining the endorsement of the PDP and naming its leader as his running mate.[2] Juan Perón, with his wife Isabel Perón as his running mate, win with a record landslide on the same FREJULI umbrella ticket on which Cámpora had been elected only six months earlier.[3]
- November 19 - 1973 Boundary Treaty between Uruguay and Argentina
Births
- August 15 - Juan Gil Navarro, actor
- September 8 - Ángel Colla, racing cyclist
Deaths
- September 25 - José Ignacio Rucci, politician and union leader (born 1924; assassinated)[4]
Films
- Andrea Andrea, directed by Carlos Rinaldi
- Argentinísima II, directed by Fernando Ayala and Héctor Olivera
- Los caballeros de la cama redonda, directed by Gerardo Sofovich
- Los Doctores las prefieren desnudas, directed by Gerardo Sofovich
- Furia infernal, directed by Armando Bó
References
- ^ Moreno, Hugo (2005). Le désastre argentin. Péronisme, politique et violence sociale (1930–2001). Paris: Editions Syllepses. p. 109. (French)
- ^ Todo Argentina: 1973. Template:Es icon
- ^ Martínez, Tomás Eloy. La novela de Perón. Random House, 1985.
- ^ Clarín: Analizan una indemnización que ya cobró la familia Rucci Template:Es icon