Català > estadista: 1 sentit > nom 1, person | Sentit | A man who is a respected leader in national or international affairs. |
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| Sinònim | home d'estat |
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| Espècimens | Adenauer, Konrad Adenauer | German statesman |
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| Alcibiades, Alcibíades | ancient Athenian statesman and general in the Peloponnesian War (circa 450-404 BC) |
| Alexander Hamilton | United States statesman and leader of the Federalists |
| Anthony Charles Lynton Blair, Blair, Tony Blair | British statesman who became prime minister in 1997 (born in 1953) |
| Anwar el-Sadat, Anwar Sadat | Egyptian statesman who (as president of Egypt) negotiated a peace treaty with Menachem Begin (then prime minister of Israel) (1918-1981) |
| Arafat, Yasser Arafat | Palestinian statesman who was chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization (1929-2004) |
| Armand Jean du Plessis de Richelieu, Richelieu | French prelate and statesman |
| Arthur James Balfour | English statesman |
| Arthur Wellesley | British general and statesman |
| Ataturk, Kemal Ataturk, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Mustafa Kemal | Turkish statesman who abolished the caliphate / caliphate and founded Turkey as a modern secular state (1881-1938) |
| Augustus | Roman statesman who established the Roman Empire and became emperor in 27 BC |
| Bacon, Francis Bacon, Sir Francis Bacon | English statesman and philosopher |
| Benjamin Disraeli | British statesman who as Prime Minister bought controlling interest in the Suez Canal and made Queen Victoria the empress of India (1804-1881) |
| Bernard Baruch | Economic advisor to United States Presidents (1870-1965) |
| Bismarck | German statesman under whose leadership Germany was united (1815-1898) |
| Brandt, Willy Brandt | German statesman who as chancellor of West Germany worked to reduce tensions with eastern Europe (1913-1992) |
| Brutus, Marc Juni Brut | statesman of ancient Rome who (with Cassius) led a conspiracy to assassinate Julius Caesar (85-42 BC) |
| Cai Cassi Longí, Gai Cassi Longí, Quint Cassi | prime mover in the conspiracy against Julius Caesar (died in 42 BC) |
| Chaim Weizmann | Israeli statesman who persuaded the United States to recognize the new state of Israel and became its first president (1874-1952) |
| Charles Grey | Englishman who as Prime Minister implemented social reforms including the abolition of slavery throughout the British Empire (1764-1845) |
| Charles James Fox | English statesman who supported American independence and the French Revolution (1749-1806) |
| Charles Watson-Wentworth | English statesman who served as prime minister and who opposed the war with the American colonies (1730-1782) |
| Chateaubriand | French statesman and writer |
| Chiang Kai-shek | Chinese military and political figure |
| Churchill, Winston Churchill | British statesman and leader during World War II |
| Cicero, Marc Tul·li Ciceró, Tully | A Roman statesman and orator remembered for his mastery of Latin prose (106-43 BC) |
| Cincinnatus, Luci Quint Cincinnat I, Luci Quint Cincinnat | Roman statesman regarded as a model of simple virtue |
| Clement Attlee | British statesman and leader of the Labour Party who instituted the welfare state in Britain (1883-1967) |
| Colin Powell | United States general who was the first African American to serve as chief of staff |
| Cromwell, Oliver Cromwell | English general and statesman who led the parliamentary army in the English Civil War (1599-1658) |
| Cèsar, Juli Cèsar, Julius Caesar | conqueror of Gaul and master of Italy (100-44 BC) |
| Daniel Ortega, Daniel Ortega Saavedra, José Daniel Ortega Saavedra | Nicaraguan statesman (born in 1945) |
| Dayan, Moshe Dayan | Israeli general and statesman (1915-1981) |
| Dean Acheson, Dean Gooderham Acheson | United States statesman who promoted the Marshall Plan and helped establish NATO (1893-1971) |
| Demòstenes, Demosthenes | Athenian statesman and orator (circa 385-322 BC) |
| Deng Xiaoping | Chinese communist statesman (1904-1997) |
| Eamon de Valera | Irish statesman (born in the United States) |
| Edmund Burke | British statesman famous for his oratory |
| Ernest Bevin | British labor leader and statesman who played an important role in diplomacy after World War II (1884-1951) |
| Frederick North | British statesman under George III whose policies led to rebellion in the American colonies (1732-1792) |
| Fridtjof Nansen | Norwegian explorer of the Arctic and director of the League of Nations relief program for refugees of World War I (1861-1930) |
| Fumimaro Konoe | Japanese statesman who set Japan's expansionist policies and formed an alliance with Germany and Italy (1891-1945) |
| Gai Flamini | Roman statesman and general who built the Flaminian Way |
| Gamal Abdel Nasser | Egyptian statesman who nationalized the Suez Canal (1918-1970) |
| Gandhi, Indira Gandhi | daughter of Nehru who served as prime minister of India from 1966 to 1977 (1917-1984) |
| George Marshall | United States general and statesman who as Secretary of State organized the European Recovery Program (1880-1959) |
| Georges Clemenceau | French statesman who played a key role in negotiating the Treaty of Versailles (1841-1929) |
| Gneu Pompeu Magne | Roman general and statesman who quarrelled with Caesar and fled to Egypt where he was murdered (106-48 BC) |
| Golda Meir | Israeli statesman (born in Russia) (1898-1978) |
| Gorbachev, Mikhail Gorbachev, Mikhaïl Gorbatxov, Mikhaïl Serguèievitx Gorbatxov | Soviet statesman whose foreign policy brought an end to the Cold War and whose domestic policy introduced major reforms (born in 1931) |
| Gouverneur Morris | United States statesman who led the committee that produced the final / final draft of the United States Constitution (1752-1816) |
| Havel, Vaclav Havel | Czech dramatist and statesman whose plays opposed totalitarianism and who served as president of Czechoslovakia from 1989 to 1992 and president of the Czech Republic since 1993 (born in 1936) |
| Helmut Schmidt, Schmidt | German statesman who served as chancellor of Germany (born in 1918) |
| Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd, Hendrik Verwoerd | South African statesman who instituted the policy of apartheid (1901-1966) |
| Hindenburg, Paul von Hindenburg | German field marshal and statesman |
| Ho Chi Minh | Vietnamese communist statesman who fought the Japanese in World War II and the French until 1954 and South Vietnam until 1975 (1890-1969) |
| Hosni Mubarak | Egyptian statesman who became president in 1981 after Sadat was assassinated (born in 1929) |
| Ian Smith | Rhodesian statesman who declared independence of Zimbabwe from Great Britain (born in 1919) |
| Jawaharlal Nehru, Nehru | Indian statesman and leader with Gandhi in the struggle / struggle for home rule |
| Jefferson Davis | American statesman |
| John Major | British statesman who was prime minister from 1990 until 1997 (born in 1943) |
| Josip Broz, Tito | Yugoslav statesman who led the resistance to German occupation during World War II and established a communist state after the war (1892-1980) |
| Kenneth Kaunda | statesman who led Northern Rhodesia to full independence as Zambia in 1964 and served as Zambia's first president (1924-1999) |
| Khruixtxov, Kruschev, Nikita Khrushchev | Soviet statesman and premier who denounced / denounced Stalin (1894-1971) |
| Kurt Waldheim | Austrian diplomat who was Secretary General of the United Nations from 1972 to 1981 |
| Lech Walesa | Polish labor leader and statesman (born in 1943) |
| Leonid Brezhnev | Soviet statesman who became president of the Soviet Union (1906-1982) |
| Lucius Annaeus Seneca, Seneca, Séneca, Sèneca | Roman statesman and philosopher who was an advisor to Nero |
| Machiavelli, Maquiavel | A statesman of Florence who advocated a strong central government (1469-1527) |
| Mandela, Nelson Mandela | South African statesman who was released from prison to become the nation's first democratically elected president in 1994 (born in 1918) |
| Marc Vipsani Agripa | Roman general who commanded the fleet that defeated the forces of Antony and Cleopatra at Actium (63-12 BC) |
| Menachem Begin | Israeli statesman (born in Russia) who (as prime minister of Israel) negotiated a peace treaty with Anwar Sadat (then the president of Egypt) (1913-1992) |
| Metternich | Austrian statesman (1773-1859) |
| Mikhail Kalinin | soviet statesman and head of state of the USSR (1875-1946) |
| Mitterrand | French statesman and president of France from 1981 to 1985 (1916-1996) |
| Molotov, Viatxeslav Mikhàilovitx Mólotov | Soviet statesman (1890-1986) |
| Muhammad Ali Jinnah | Indian statesman who was the founder of Pakistan as a Muslim state (1876-1948) |
| Neville Chamberlain | British statesman who as Prime Minister pursued a policy of appeasement toward fascist Germany (1869-1940) |
| Pericles, Pèricles | Athenian statesman whose leadership contributed to Athens' political and cultural / cultural supremacy in Greece |
| Putin, Vladimir Putin, Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin | Russian statesman chosen as president of the Russian Federation in 2000 |
| Robert Clive | British general and statesman whose victory at Plassey in 1757 strengthened British control of India (1725-1774) |
| Robert Walpole | Englishman and Whig statesman who (under George I) was effectively the first British prime minister (1676-1745) |
| Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan | Indian philosopher and statesman who introduced Indian philosophy to the West (1888-1975) |
| Stanley Baldwin | English statesman |
| Stephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger | Boer statesman (1825-1904) |
| Sukarno | Indonesian statesman who obtained the independence of Indonesia from the Netherlands in 1949 and served as president until ousted by Suharto in a coup d'etat (1901-1970) |
| Sun Yat-sen | Chinese statesman who organized the Kuomintang and led the revolution that overthrew the Manchu dynasty in 1911 and 1912 (1866-1925) |
| Temístocles | Athenian statesman who persuaded Athens to build a navy and then led it to victory over the Persians (527-460 BC) |
| Thomas More | English statesman who opposed Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and was imprisoned and beheaded |
| Vargas | Brazilian statesman who ruled Brazil as a virtual dictator (1883-1954) |
| William Ewart Gladstone, William Gladstone | liberal British statesman who served as prime minister four times (1809-1898) |
| William Pitt | English statesman who brought the Seven Years' War to an end (1708-1778) |
| William Pitt | English statesman and son of Pitt the Elder (1759-1806) |
| General | polític, pol | A person active in party politics |
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| Anglès | statesman, solon, national leader |
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| Espanyol | estadista, hombre de estado |
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| Noms | diplomàcia | wisdom in the management of public affairs |
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