Second Triumvirate | |
|---|---|
El Segundo Triunvirato | |
| President of the Dominican Republic | |
| In office 27 June 1964 – 3 September 1965 | |
| Leader | Donald Reid Cabral Ramon Caceres |
| Preceded by | Triumvirate of 1963 |
| Succeeded by | Héctor García-Godoy |
The Second Triumvirate was a short-lived military junta that controlled the Dominican Republic after the Triumvirate of 1963 created after the coup that overthrew Juan Bosch fell apart.[1]
Brutal repression tactics by the military to eliminate rebels & suppress protests led the members of the 1963 civilian junta to step down; Emilio de los Santos Manuel on December 22, 1963, Ramón Tapia Espinal on April 8, 1964 & finally Enrique Tavares Espaillat on June 27, 1964.[1]
Donald Joseph Reid Cabral became the temporary minister of the armed forces & national police making him the de facto leader of the country. Austerity reforms & the firing of military personnel not loyal to Reid would lead to a military rebellion on April 24, 1965, that demanded Bosch's restoration.[1][2]
| History of the Dominican Republic |
|---|
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| Pre-Spanish Hispaniola (–1492) |
| Captaincy General of Santo Domingo (1492–1795) |
| French Santo Domingo (1795–1809) |
| España Boba (1809–1821) |
| Republic of Spanish Haiti (1821–1822) |
| Republic of Haiti (1822–1844) |
| First Republic (1844–1861) |
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| Spanish occupation (1861–1865) |
| Second Republic (1865–1916) |
| United States occupation (1916–1924) |
| Third Republic (1924–1965) |
| Fourth Republic (1966–) |
| Topics |
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LGBT history Postal history Jewish history |
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See also
References
- 1 2 3 Mansbach, Richard W. (1971). Dominican Crisis 1965. New York: Facts On File. pp. 9–25. ISBN 978-0871961525.
- ↑ Lewis, Paul (2001-11-02). "Juan Bosch, 92, Freely Elected Dominican President, Dies". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
