Luis Alberto Sánchez

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Sánchez and the second or maternal family name is Sánchez.
Luis Alberto Sánchez Sánchez
First Vice President of Peru
In office
28 July 1985  28 July 1990
President Alan García
Preceded by Fernando Schwalb López Aldana
Succeeded by Máximo San Román
Prime Minister of Peru
In office
15 May 1989  30 September 1989
President Alan García
Preceded by Armando Villanueva
Succeeded by Guillermo Larco Cox
Minister of the Presidency
In office
15 May 1989  30 September 1989
President Alan García
Preceded by Armando Villanueva
Succeeded by Rodolfo Beltrán Bravo
Member of the Senate
In office
28 July 1963  28 July 1968
Constituency Lima
In office
26 July 1980  5 April 1992
President of the Senate
In office
28 July 1965  28 July 1966
Preceded by Ramiro Prialé
Succeeded by David Aguilar Cornejo
In office
26 July 1985  26 July 1986
Preceded by Manuel Ulloa Elías
Succeeded by Armando Villanueva
First Vice President of the Constituent Assembly
In office
28 July 1978  28 July 1980
President Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre
Member of the Constituent Assembly
In office
28 July 1978  26 July 1980
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
28 July 1945  29 October 1948
Constituency Lima
Member of the Constituent Congress
In office
8 December 1931  8 January 1932 (Deposed)
Personal details
Born (1900-10-12)12 October 1900
Lima, Peru
Died 6 February 1994(1994-02-06) (aged 93)
Lima, Peru
Political party Peruvian Aprista Party
Alma mater National University of San Marcos

Luis Alberto Félix Sánchez Sánchez (October 12, 1900 - February 6, 1994) was a Peruvian lawyer, jurist, philosopher, historian, writer and politician. A historic member of the Peruvian Aprista Party, he became a Senator and member of two Constitutional Assemblies, in which the second one (1978-1980), he occupied the Vice-Presidency of the Assembly and the Presidency of the Constitution Committee. During the Presidency of Alan García (1985-1990), he was his Vice President and was appointed for a short period as Prime Minister of Peru. In Congress he served as President of the Senate two non consecutive times (1965-1966; 1985-1986).

The figure of Luis Alberto Sanchez, who was born at Lima in 1900, covers most of the century. He was three times Provost of the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos. Together with Raúl Porras Barrenechea and Jorge Guillermo Leguia, he was one of the leading figures of the Conversation University founded in 1919 with the participation, among others, of Victor Raul Haya de la Torre, Jorge Basadre, Carlos Paz Soldan Moreyra, Ricardo Garcia and Jose Luis Vegas Llosa Belaunde.

Among his literary works and news articles we have a large amount from Garcilaso Inca de la Vega, first Creole (1939), Aladdin or life and work of Jose Santos Chocano (1960), process and content of the Latin American novel (1968), comparative History of American literature (1973-1976), to Indianism and Indigenism in Peruvian literature (1981).

But his main work and the dearest was dedicated to Manuel González Prada, which took shape with titles like 'Don Manuel' (1930), 'Myth and Reality of Gonzalez Prada' (1976), 'Our lives are the rivers ... History and legend of González Prada' (1977) and a substantial variety of editions of the work of González Prada. As a politician, was a prominent figure of the Peruvian Aprista Party and scored the second most votes, after Victor Raul Haya de la Torre, during the general elections to constitute the Constituent Assembly in 1979. At the end of his life, in 1990 he was elected Senator and served until the closing of Congress by the 1992 self-coup of Alberto Fujimori. He died in 1994 in Lima, dedicating his last days to writing.

He taught at the Deutsche Schule Lima Alexander von Humboldt.[1]

References

  1. Novak, Fabián. Las relaciones entre el Perú y Alemania, 1828-2003 (Serie Política exterior peruana). Fondo Editorial PUCP, 2004. ISBN 9972426343, 9789972426346. p. 45.


Political offices
Preceded by
Armando Villanueva del Campo
Prime Minister of Peru
15 May 1989 30 September 1989
Succeeded by
Guillermo Larco Cox


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