Luís Viana Filho

Brazilian politician
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Luís Viana Filho
Federal deputy for Bahia
In office
1935–1967
Minister of the Civil House of Brazil
In office
1964–1967
PresidentCastelo Branco
Preceded byGetúlio Barbosa de Moura
Succeeded byLuís Augusto Fraga Navarro de Brito
Minister of Justice and Internal Affairs
In office
1965–1965
PresidentCastelo Branco
Preceded byMilton Campos
Succeeded byJuracy Magalhães
Minister of Interior Affairs of Brazil
In office
1966–1966
PresidentCastelo Branco
Preceded byMem de Azambuja Sá
Succeeded byCarlos Medeiros Silva
36th governor of Bahia
In office
1967–1971
Preceded byJunior Lomanto
Succeeded byAntônio Carlos Magalhães
President of the Federal Senate of Brazil
In office
1979–1981
PresidentJoão Figueiredo
Preceded byPetrônio Portella
Succeeded byJarbas Passarinho
Senator from Bahia
In office
1975–1990
Preceded byAluísio Lopes de Carvalho Filho
Succeeded byLuís Viana Neto
Personal details
Born(1908-03-28)28 March 1908
Paris, France
Died5 June 1990(1990-06-05) (aged 82)
São Paulo, Brazil
SpouseJulieta Pontes Viana
ChildrenLuís Viana Neto
Parent(s)Joana Gertrudes Viana (mother)
Luís Viana (father)
ProfessionLawyer, teacher, historian, politician

Luís Viana Filho (old spelling Luiz Vianna Filho) (28 March 1908 – 5 June 1990) was a Brazilian lawyer, professor, historian and politician who governed the state Bahia from 1967 to 1971.

Biography

Filho was born in Paris, France, and his birth certificate was registered in Salvador, Brazil. He was the son of the last governor of Bahia in the 19th century, Luís Viana. He graduated in law in 1929, but exercised the profession of journalist, corresponding to the newspapers in the Bahian capital "Diário da Bahia" and "A Tarde".

Political career

In 1934, Filho entered politics, being elected federal deputy, being removed due to the coup of the Estado Novo, which returned him to journalism. One of the founders of the PSD, he was re-elected to the same post, after the end of the Vargas Era, in 1945, in successive terms until 1966, when he became incompatible to run for the state government – in an election along the lines of the Military Regime, whose installation in the country he had supported – having been, since 1964, Extraordinary Minister for Affairs of the Civil Cabinet of the exception regime.

On 3 September 1966, he was elected, indirectly, by the Legislative Assembly, taking office the following year.

After the period of government, already by the Arena, he was elected to the Senate, where he chaired the Foreign Relations Commission and the Federal Senate itself, in the 1979–80 biennium. He died in 1990, when he was serving his second term as a senator, having also integrated the PDS and PMDB.

Filho was the only person to integrate all three Constituent Assemblies of the 20th Century (1934, 1946 and 1987–88).

Academic career

Filho became a Professor of Private International Law and History of Brazil at the Federal University of Bahia. As a historian, he published a number of books.

He was a member of the Historical and Geographic Institute of Bahia; the Academia de Letras da Bahia; meritorious member of the Brazilian Historical and Geographic Institute; corresponding member of the International Academy of Portuguese Culture, the Academy of Sciences of Lisbon and the Portuguese Academy of History.

He was elected to the Brazilian Academy of Letters on 8 April 1954, the third member of Chair 22, whose patron is José Bonifacio. He took office on 15 April of the following year, received by Menotti Del Picchia.

Government of Bahia

As part of the period known as "Brazilian Miracle", marked by strong industrialization and exacerbated external indebtedness, Filho began construction of an industrial park in Bahia, in Aratu, revolving around the petrochemical industry (CIA – Centro Industrial de Aratu).

In his inaugural speech he said his government would be based on the principles of "Order, Work and Morality". It promoted some reforms in teaching, but always focused on the construction of classrooms and not on the effective preparation of the teaching profession. Since that administration, later administrations associated future declines in public education with some of these decisions.

While in office, he received a visit from Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom.

Decorations

References

  1. ^ "Viana Filho, Luís, 1908-1990 - LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies | Library of Congress, from LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies (Library of Congress)".
  2. ^ "Category:Luís Viana Filho - Wikimedia Commons".
  3. ^ A vida de Rui Barbosa. Coleção Documentos brasileiros. Livraria J. Olympio Editora. 1977.
  4. ^ "Av. Luís Viana Filho".
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Governors of Bahia (1889–present)
  1. Virgílio Clímaco Damásio
  2. Manuel Vitorino
  3. Hermes Ernesto da Fonseca
  4. Virgílio Clímaco Damásio
  5. José Gonçalves da Silva
  6. Tude Soares Neiva
  7. Leal Ferreira
  8. Rodrigues Lima
  9. Luiz Vianna
  10. Severino Vieira
  11. José Marcelino de Sousa
  12. João Ferreira de Araújo Pinho
  13. Aurélio Rodrigues Viana
  14. Bráulio Xavier
  15. José Joaquim Seabra
  16. Góis Calmon
  17. Vital Soares
  18. Frederico Augusto Rodrigues da Costa
  19. Bastos do Amaral
  20. Artur Neiva
  21. Raimundo Rodrigues Barbosa
  22. Juracy Magalhães
  23. Antônio Fernandes Dantas
  24. Landulfo Alves
  25. Renato Onofre Pinto Aleixo
  26. Bulcão Viana
  27. Carneiro da Rocha
  28. Cândido Caldas
  29. Octávio Mangabeira
  30. Régis Pacheco
  31. Antônio Balbino
  32. Juracy Magalhães
  33. Lomanto Júnior
  34. Luiz Viana Filho
  35. Antônio Carlos Magalhães
  36. Roberto Santos
  37. Antônio Carlos Magalhães
  38. João Durval Carneiro
  39. Waldir Pires
  40. Nilo Coelho
  41. Antônio Carlos Magalhães
  42. Ruy Trindade
  43. Antônio Imbassahy
  44. Paulo Souto
  45. César Borges
  46. Paulo Souto
  47. Jaques Wagner
  48. Rui Costa
  49. Jerônimo Rodrigues
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