| The Encyclopedia of World History. 2001. |
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| f. Peru |
| | (See 1942, Jan. 24)| | | 1945, June 10 |
| | | José Luis Bustamente was elected president, supported by Liberals and Apristas. | 1 |
| | | 1948, Oct. 29 |
| | | Pres. Bustamente's government was overthrown and replaced by a military junta under Gen. Manuel Odría (18971974). The APRA (American Popular Revolutionary Alliance) and the Communist Party were outlawed. | 2 |
| | | 1950, July 2 |
| | | Using a populist style reminiscent of Juan Perón of Argentina and running unopposed, Gen. Odría was elected president. | 3 |
| | | 1951, Aug. 13 |
| | | Peru asked the U.S., Argentina, Brazil, and Chile to investigate border incidents with Ecuador. Fighting had begun on Aug. 11 over the long-standing issue of access to certain Amazon tributaries. | 4 |
| | | 1955 |
| | | Peruvian women were granted the vote. | 5 |
| | | 1956, June 17 |
| | | Manuel Prado Ugarteche was elected president for a second term. | 6 |
| | | 195862 |
| | | As the land problem became more acute, members of Indian sierra communities organized and initiated land invasions on highland haciendas. In the region of La Convención valley, the seizures developed into a full-scale insurrection under Hugo Blanco before being brutally repressed. | 7 |
| | | 1962, July 18 |
| | | A military junta overthrew and imprisoned Pres. Prado. It also closed Congress and suspended constitutional guarantees. The U.S. suspended diplomatic relations and on July 1920 halted all aid. | 8 |
| | | Aug. 17 |
| | | The U.S. resumed diplomatic relations with Peru. | 9 |
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| The Encyclopedia of World History, Sixth
edition. Peter N. Stearns, general editor. Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Maps by Mary Reilly, copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
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