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Coup d'Etat
History of Argentina
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| | 1943 | Peron, Juan Domingo |  |
| Buenos Aires The armed forces take over the government after it joins the Allies & Peron becomes a populist member of the new Government |
| 1951 | Peron, Juan Domingo |  |
| Defeats an attempted military coup |
| 1955 | Aramburu Cilveti, Pedro Eugenio |  |
| 16th Sep An uprising, led by General Eduardo Lonardi, General Pedro E. Aramburu and Admiral Isaac Rojas , depose Per¢n and establish a provisional government |
| Nov An internal coup deposes Lonardi and places General Aramburu in the presidency |
| 1955 | Lonardi, Eduardo |  |
| 16th Sep An uprising, led by General Eduardo Lonardi, General Pedro E. Aramburu and Admiral Isaac Rojas , depose Per¢n and establish a provisional government |
| 23rd Sep Lonardi assumes the Presidency and gives a speech from the balcony of the Casa Rosada, saying there would be "none either victorious or defeated" |
| Nov An internal coup deposes Lonardi and places General Aramburu in the presidency |
| 1955 | Peron, Juan Domingo |  |
| 16th Sep An uprising, led by General Eduardo Lonardi, General Pedro E. Aramburu and Admiral Isaac Rojas , depose Per¢n and establish a provisional government |
| 16th Sep Juan Peron is overthrown |
| 16th Sep The Revoluci¢n Libertadora (Spanish, Liberating Revolution) is a military uprising that ends the second Presidential term of Juan Domingo Per¢n |
| 1955 | Rojas, Isaac |  |
| 16th Sep An uprising, led by General Eduardo Lonardi, General Pedro E. Aramburu and Admiral Isaac Rojas , depose Per¢n and establish a provisional government |
| 1973 | Campora, Hector |  |
| Brought to power by the Frente Justicialista de Liberacion |
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