List of prime ministers of Queen Juliana

Queen Juliana was the queen of the Kingdom of the Netherlands from 4 September 1948 until her abdication on 30 April 1980. During her reign she was served by 36 prime ministers: 10 in the Netherlands,[1] 15 in the Netherlands Antilles, and 11 in Suriname.[2]

Queen Juliana in 1978

List of prime ministers edit

Netherlands edit

  1. Willem Drees (1948–1958)[1]
  2. Louis Beel (1958–1959)[1]
  3. Jan de Quay (1959–1963)[1]
  4. Victor Marijnen (1963–1965)[1]
  5. Jo Cals (1965–1966)[1]
  6. Jelle Zijlstra (1966–1967)[1]
  7. Piet de Jong (1967–1971)[1]
  8. Barend Biesheuvel (1971–1973)[1]
  9. Joop den Uyl (1973–1977)[1]
  10. Dries van Agt (1977–1982)[1]

Netherlands Antilles edit

  1. Moises Frumencio da Costa Gomez (1951–1954)
  2. Efraïn Jonckheer (1954–1968)
  3. Ciro Domenico Kroon (1968–1969)
  4. Gerald C. Sprockel (1969)
  5. Ernesto O. Petronia (1969–1971)
  6. Ramez Jorge Isa (1971)
  7. Otto R.A. Beaujon (1971–1973)
  8. Juancho Evertsz (1973–1977)
  9. Lucinda da Costa Gomez-Matheeuws (1977)
  10. Leo A.I. Chance (1977)
  11. Sylvius Gerard Marie Rozendal (1977–1979)
  12. Miguel Pourier (1979)
  13. Dominico Martina (1979–1984)

Suriname edit

  1. Julius Caesar de Miranda (1949–1951)[2]
  2. Jacques Adam Drielsma (1951–1951)[2]
  3. Johannes Ate Eildert Buiskool (1951–1952)[2]
  4. Adriaan Cornelis Jasper Marius Alberga (1952)[2]
  5. Archibald Currie (1952–1955)[2][3]
  6. Johan Ferrier (1955–1958)[2]
  7. Severinus Désiré Emanuels (1958–1963)[2]
  8. Johan Adolf Pengel (1963–1969)[2]
  9. Arthur Johan May (1969)[2][4]
  10. Jules Sedney (1969–1973)[2]
  11. Henck Arron (1973–1980)[2][5]

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k (in Dutch) Minister-presidenten sinds 1900 Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine, Parlement & Politiek. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Suriname, WorldStatesmen.org. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
  3. ^ Acting Prime Minister from 1952 to 1954.
  4. ^ Acting Prime Minister
  5. ^ Suriname became independent in 1975.