Risultati di ricerca
Marie-Louise Coidavid (1778–1851) Henri Christophe (as President, then King of North Haiti) 1807–1820. Marie-Madeleine Lachenais (1778–1843) Alexandre Pétion (1807–1818) and Jean-Pierre Boyer (1818–1843) (mistress, never married) 1807–1843. Marie-Madeleine Lachenais was the mistress and political advisor of both President Alexandre ...
- Category:First ladies and gentlemen of Finland - Wikipedia
Pages in category "First ladies and gentlemen of Finland"...
- Category:First ladies and gentlemen of Finland - Wikipedia
First ladies and gentlemen of Finland. Lists of spouses of heads of state. Lists of Finnish women. Finnish politician stubs.
PresidentIn OfficeSpouseMarriage Years2024–1998–presentSauli Niinistö 2012−20242012–20242009–presentSauli Niinistö 2012−20242012–20241974–1995 †Tarja Halonen 2000−20122000–20122000–presentZulema María Eva Menem, nicknamed Zulemita, was the first and only presidential daughter, officially known to act as a first lady. Cristina Fernández, former First Lady from 2003 to 2007 was the first woman democratically elected President of Argentina. Néstor Kirchner (1950–2010), former Argentine president, was the only First Gentleman ...
First Lady ( Chichewa: Madona oyamba) or Gentleman of Malawi ( Njonda zaku Malawi) is the official title held by the spouse of the president of Malawi, an office created in 1964. Malawi's current first lady is Monica Chakwera, who had held the position since June 2020.
American actor Marlon Brando meeting the First Lady of Finland, Mrs. Sylvi Kekkonen, in Helsinki, Finland in 1967. French-speaking countries have used the term première dame for first ladies, regardless of where the first lady is from. At least one article, published in 2017, used the term premier monsieur for first gentleman.
From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Jump to navigation Jump to search. Countries of Europe: Armenia ‡ · Austria · Azerbaijan ‡ · Bulgaria · Cyprus ‡ · Czech Republic · Estonia · Finland · France ‡ · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Italy · Latvia · Lithuania · Moldova · Poland · Portugal ‡ · Russia ‡ · Slovenia · Sweden · Turkey ‡ · Ukraine