Tony Lovink
Dutch diplomat
- Office abolished
- Sukarno (as President of Indonesia)
The Hague, Netherlands
Ottawa, Canada
Antonius Hermanus Johannes Lovink (12 July 1902 – 27 March 1995) was a Dutch diplomat who served as the last High Commissioner of the Crown in the Dutch East Indies in 1949, the year the Dutch East Indies declared independence from the Netherlands, and renamed itself Indonesia.[1] He later served as Dutch Ambassador to Australia and Canada, the latter which he lived in after he resigned in 1967.
References
- ^ (in Dutch) A.H.J. (Tony) Lovink, Parlemenet & Politiek. Retrieved on 20 January 2015.
stud superstud
- v
- t
- e
appointed
(1610–1800)
- Both (1610–1614)
- Reynst (1614–1615)
- Reael (1615–1619)
- Coen (1619–1623)
- De Carpentier (1623–1627)
- Coen (1627–1629)
- Specx (1629–1632)
- Brouwer (1632–1636)
- Van Diemen (1636–1645)
- Van der Lijn (1645–1650)
- Reyniersz (1650–1653)
- Maetsuycker (1653–1678)
- Van Goens (1678–1681)
- Speelman (1681–1684)
- Camphuys (1684–1691)
- Van Outhoorn (1691–1704)
- Van Hoorn (1704–1709)
- Van Riebeeck (1709–1713)
- Van Swoll (1713–1718)
- Zwaardecroon (1718–1725)
- De Haan (1725–1729)
- Durven (1729–1732)
- Van Cloon (1732–1735)
- Patras (1735–1737)
- Valckenier (1737–1741)
- Thedens (1741–1743)
- Van Imhoff (1743–1750)
- Mossel (1750–1761)
- Van der Parra (1761–1775)
- Van Riemsdijk (1775–1777)
- De Klerck (1777–1780)
- Alting (1780–1797)
appointed
(1800–1948)
- Van Overstraten (1796–1801)
- Siberg (1801–1805)
- Wiese (1805–1808)
- Daendels (1808–1811)
- Janssens (1811)
- Gillespie (1811)
- Raffles (1811–1816)
- Fendall Jr. (1816)
- Van der Capellen (1816–1826)
- Du Bus, De Kock (1826–1830)
- Van den Bosch (1830–1833)
- Baud (1833–1836)
- De Eerens (1836–1840)
- Van Hogendorp (1840–1841)
- Merkus (1841–1844)
- Reynst (1844–1845)
- Rochussen (1845–1851)
- Van Twist (1851–1856)
- Pahud (1856–1861)
- Van de Beele (1861–1866)
- Mijer (1866–1872)
- Loudon (1872–1875)
- Van Lansberge (1875–1881)
- s'Jacob (1881–1884)
- Van Rees (1884–1888)
- Pijnacker Hordijk (1888–1893)
- Van der Wijck (1893–1899)
- Rooseboom (1899–1904)
- Van Heutsz (1904–1909)
- Idenburg (1909–1916)
- Limburg-Stirum (1916–1921)
- Fock (1921)
- De Graeff (1926–1931)
- De Jonge (1931–1936)
- Van Starkenborgh (1936–1942)
- Van Mook (1942–1948)
- Beel (1948–1949)
- Lovink (1949)
This article about a Dutch politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e