Juan Antonio Iribarren | |
Office: | Acting President of Chile |
Predecessor: | Alfredo Duhalde |
Successor: | Gabriel González Videla |
Birth Name: | Juan Antonio Iribarren Cabezas |
Birth Date: | 7 May 1885 |
Birth Place: | Vicuña, Chile |
Death Place: | Santiago, Chile |
Alma Mater: | University of Chile |
Party: | Radical |
Juan Antonio Iribarren Cabezas (7 May 1885 – 11 April 1968)[1] [2] was a Chilean politician. He was president of Chile from 17 October to 3 November 1946.[3]
He studied at the Liceo de La Serena and then at the University of Chile, graduating as a lawyer.
He was president of the pro-homage committee to Gabriela Mistral, which contributed to the formation of the Centro Cultural Gabriela Mistral in Vicuña, now called Gabriela Mistral Museum of Vicuña.
President Juan Antonio Ríos appointed him education minister in 1942.
After the death of President Rios, Vice President Alfredo Duhalde called for new presidential elections, after which he left his office to Juan Antonio Iribarren under pressure from Gabriel Gonzalez Videla.
He taught at the law school of the University of Chile, in the chair of General History of Law from 1918 to 1954. He died on Santiago, Chile, in 11 April 1968.[2]