António Granjo

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António Granjo
António Granjo
Prime Minister of Portugal
(President of the Ministry)
Order: 77th and 82nd (23rd and 28th of the Republic)
Term of Office (1st) July 19, 1920 - November 20, 1920
(2nd) August 30, 1921 - October 19, 1921
Predecessor: (1st) António Maria da Silva
(2nd) Tomé de Barros Queirós
Successor: (1st) Álvaro de Castro
(2nd) Manuel Maria Coelho
Date of Birth December 27, 1881
Place of Birth: Chaves
Date of Death October 19, 1921
Place of Death: Lisbon
Occupation: Lawyer and President of the Municipal Chamber of Chaves
Political Party: Evolutionist Republican, later Liberal Republican

António Joaquim Granjo (Chaves, 27 December 1881 - Lisbon, 19 October 1921), pron. IPA: [ɐ̃'tɔniu 'gɾɐ̃ʒu], was a Portuguese lawyer and politician.

He was a republican from his youth, and was a member of the National Constituent Assembly, elected on 28 May 1911. He fought during Portuguese participation in World War I, and wrote a book about his experiences.

After President Sidónio Pais was shot dead, Granjo took action against the "North Monarchy", an attempt to restore a royalist regime in the north of Portugal, in 1919. He was President of the Municipal Chamber of Chaves, from February to July 1919. He was elected, the same year, to the Chamber of Deputies, by the Evolutionist Republican Party, later being a founder of its successor movement, the Liberal Republican Party. Minister of Justice during Domingos Pereira's coalition government, he served two brief terms as Prime Minister, the first time, from 19 July to 20 November 1920, in a liberal government. Afterwards he was nominated Prime Minister again, to take the place of another liberal, Tomé de Barros Queiroz, on 30 August 1921.

Granjo was assassinated, while in office, during the infamous "Noite Sangrenta" ("Bloody Night"), on 19 October 1921. The political affiliation of his murderers is still a matter of dispute. That same night, two other prominent republicans of moderately right-wing sympathies, Machado Santos (widely known as the founder of the republic) and Carlos da Maia, also lost their lives.

Preceded by
António Maria da Silva
Prime Minister of Portugal
(President of the Ministry)

1920
Succeeded by
Álvaro de Castro
Preceded by
Tomé de Barros Queirós
Prime Minister of Portugal
(President of the Ministry)

1921
Succeeded by
Manuel Maria Coelho


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