Vũ Văn Mẫu
Vũ Văn Mẫu | |
---|---|
Prime Minister of the Republic of Vietnam | |
In office 28 April 1975 – 30 April 1975 | |
President | Dương Văn Minh |
Preceded by | Nguyễn Bá Cẩn |
Succeeded by | Huỳnh Tấn Phát (as Chairman of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam) |
Personal details | |
Born | Hanoi, French Indochina | 25 July 1914
Died | 20 August 1998 Paris, France | (aged 84)
Alma mater | University of Paris |
Vũ Văn Mẫu (25 July 1914 – 20 August 1998) was the last Prime Minister of South Vietnam and served under President Dương Văn Minh leadership.
Biography[]
Vũ Văn Mẫu was born in 1914 in Hanoi, Indochina. He earned a doctorate in law from the University of Paris and practiced law in Hanoi. After Vietnam’s partition in 1954, he moved to Saigon with his family and joined the Faculty of Law at the University of Saigon, where he became the Dean of the Faculty. He was recognized as an expert in civil and historical law. After several years as a professor he then became a local Saigon judge, rising through the ranks to become Judge of the Saigon Superior Court. During his legal career and even during retirement and exile, he authored a number of books, including one entitled Vietnamese Civil Law.[citation needed]
Political career[]
Mẫu was South Vietnam's ambassador to the United Kingdom, Belgium and the Netherlands in the 1960s.[1]
In the early 1970s, he was elected Senator of the Republic where he became a prominent national politician. In 1975, he became Prime Minister of the Republic of Vietnam under President Dương Văn Minh.[citation needed]
Exile[]
Vũ Văn Mẫu moved to Paris in 1988, where he died on 20 August 1998, at age 84.[1]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Pace, Eric (14 September 1998). "u Van Mau, Last Premier Of South Vietnam, Dies at 84". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 September 2019.
- Vietnamese lawyers
- Prime Ministers of South Vietnam
- Vietnamese anti-communists
- 1914 births
- 1998 deaths
- People from Hanoi
- Ambassadors of South Vietnam to the United Kingdom
- Ambassadors of South Vietnam to Belgium
- Ambassadors of South Vietnam to the Netherlands
- Disease-related deaths in France
- 20th-century lawyers