Habib Abu Shahla
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حبيب أبو شهلا
22 October 1946 – 7 April 1947
1943–1945
1943–1943
Beirut, Ottoman Empire
Beirut, Lebanon
University of Paris
Habib Abu Shahla (Arabic: حبيب أبو شهلا / Ḥabīb Abū Shahlā, also spelled Abou Chahla) or Abi Shahla (Arabic: أبي شهلا / Abī Shahlā, also spelled Abi Chahla; 1902[citation needed] – 22 March 1957[1]) was a Lebanese politician and public figure, several times member of Parliament.[1] He hailed from an Orthodox family.[2] Abu Shahla had studied at the American University of Beirut and at the University of Paris.[3] He was the minister of justice in 1943 and the minister of education and Deputy Prime Minister of Lebanon between 1943 and 1945 and the speaker of the Lebanese Parliament between 1946 and 1947.[4]
A street bears his name and a statue of him stands in Beirut.
See also
References
- ^ a b "Obituary". Middle East Forum. Vol. 32. p. 12.
- ^ Oren Barak (November 2000). "The Hardships of Consociation, the Perils of Partition: Lebanon, 1943-1990". Davis Occasional Papers. 86: 6.
- ^ Donald Malcolm Reid (1981). Lawyers and Politics in the Arab World: 1880–1960. Bibliotheca Islamica. p. 257. ISBN 9780882970288.
- ^ Imad Salamey (15 October 2013). The Government and Politics of Lebanon. Routledge. ISBN 9781135011321.
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- Pharaoun (1945)
- Frangieh (1945–46)
- Abu Shahla (1946)
- Pharaoun (1946–47)
- Frangieh (1947–49)
- Takla (1949–51)
- Al Oweini (1951)
- Helou (1951–52)
- Takla (1952)
- Akkari (1952)
- Moubarak (1952–53)
- Chehab (1953)
- Hakim (1953)
- Naqqache (1953–55)
- Frangieh (1955)
- Lahoud (1955–57)
- Malik (1957–58)
- Takla (1958)
- Al Oweini (1958–60)
- Takla (1960–64)
- Ammoun (1964)
- Takla (1964–65)
- Al Oweini (1965)
- Hakim (1965–66)
- Takla (1966)
- Hakim (1966–68)
- Boutros (1968)
- Al Oweini (1968–69)
- Karami (1969)
- Salem (1969)
- Majdalani (1969–70)
- Abou Hamad (1970–73)
- Babikian (1973)
- Naffah (1973–74)
- Takla (1974–75)
- Dahdah (1975)
- Takla (1975–76)
- Chamoun (1976)
- Boutros (1976–82)
- Salem (1982–84)
- Karami (1984–87)
- Hoss (1987–90)
- Boueiz (1990–92)
- Maalouf (1992)
- Boueiz (1992–98)
- Hoss (1998–2000)
- Hammoud (2000–03)
- Obeid (2003–05)
- Hammoud (2004–05)
- Salloukh (2005–09)
- Al Shami (2009–11)
- Mansour (2011–14)
- Bassil (2014–20)
- Hitti (2020)
- Wehbe (2020–21)
- Akar (interim) (2021)
- Bou Habib (2021–present)
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