Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Odysseas Angelis

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President
  
Georgios Papadopoulos

Name
  
Odysseas Angelis

Nationality
  
Greek

Role
  
Public official

Allegiance
  
Greece

Service/branch
  
Hellenic Army

Rank
  
General


Born
  
January 2, 1912 Steni, Euboea (
1912-01-02
)

Commands
  
Chief of the Hellenic Armed Forces Chief of the Hellenic Army General Staff

Battles/wars
  
Greco-Italian War, Greek Civil War

Died
  
March 22, 1987, Athens, Greece

Battles and wars
  
Greco-Italian War, Greek Civil War

Odysseas Angelis (Greek: Οδυσσέας Αγγελής, 1912–1987) was Vice-President of Greece in 1973, during the "republican" period of the military junta of 1967–1974.

Along with most of those involved in the coup of April 1967, he was an officer of the Greek Army. At the time he held the rank of Lieutenant General and was appointed Chief of the Army General Staff following the coup. He was responsible, at least officially, for the Army Decree Nr. 13, which banned the musical works of Mikis Theodorakis. In the failed royal counter-coup of 13 December 1967, Angelis remained loyal to the junta, and was rewarded with promotion to full General and appointment as Chief of the Armed Forces Command. On 21 April 1967 Angelis passed a series of laws limiting protest, including a ban on public gatherings of more than five people, a ban on all private gatherings of a political nature, a ban on propaganda against the generals and a ban on civilians holding guns. Personally loyal to junta principal Georgios Papadopoulos, Angelis was chosen by the latter as his Vice President when he abolished the monarchy and declared Greece a Presidential Republic on 1 June 1973. Angelis served in this post until 25 November 1973, when Papadopoulos lost power to a hardliner coup.

Following the restoration of democratic rule in 1974, in the 1975 Junta Trials, he was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for high treason and mutiny. Angelis committed suicide in his cell in the Korydallos Prison on 22 March 1987.

References

Odysseas Angelis Wikipedia