RELIGIOUS FIGURE

Juan Carlos Aramburu

1912 - 2004

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Juan Carlos Aramburu (February 11, 1912 – November 18, 2004) was the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Buenos Aires, Argentina, from 1975 to 1990, and was named to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul VI in 1976. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Juan Carlos Aramburu is the 1,552nd most popular religious figure (up from 1,851st in 2019), the 134th most popular biography from Argentina (up from 201st in 2019) and the 5th most popular Argentinean Religious Figure.

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Among RELIGIOUS FIGURES

Among religious figures, Juan Carlos Aramburu ranks 1,552 out of 3,187Before him are Jean Zerbo, Ibn Asakir, Hujr ibn Adi, Michael the Syrian, Benjamin I of Constantinople, and Abdullah ibn Ja'far. After him are Hudson Taylor, Düsum Khyenpa, 1st Karmapa Lama, Polyeuctus, Catherine Eddowes, Gregory III Laham, and Saint Mercurius.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1912, Juan Carlos Aramburu ranks 120Before him are Marcel Camus, Muriel Humphrey Brown, Perry Como, Richard Brooks, Marta Eggerth, and Martha Scott. After him are Dinmukhamed Kunaev, Martin Schwarzschild, Wendy Hiller, Thorbjørn Egner, Moses Finley, and Nancy Wake. Among people deceased in 2004, Juan Carlos Aramburu ranks 88Before him are Gordon Cooper, Harold Shipman, John Charles, Alan King, Marco Pantani, and Shiing-Shen Chern. After him are Brian Clough, Philip Abelson, Fred Lawrence Whipple, Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo, Arnold Orville Beckman, and Irina Press.

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In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Juan Carlos Aramburu ranks 134 out of 1,154Before him are Gaspar Noé (1963), Manuel Ferreira (1905), Javier Mascherano (1984), Mario Bunge (1919), Arturo Umberto Illia (1900), and Gato Barbieri (1932). After him are Facundo Cabral (1937), Mauricio Pochettino (1972), Alberto Manguel (1948), Amadeo Carrizo (1926), Paulo Dybala (1993), and Héctor José Cámpora (1909).

Among RELIGIOUS FIGURES In Argentina

Among religious figures born in Argentina, Juan Carlos Aramburu ranks 5Before him are Pope Francis (1936), Leonardo Sandri (1943), Mario Aurelio Poli (1947), and Estanislao Esteban Karlic (1926). After him are Antonio Caggiano (1889), Víctor Manuel Fernández (1962), Luis Héctor Villalba (1934), Eduardo Francisco Pironio (1920), Raúl Francisco Primatesta (1919), Jorge María Mejía (1923), and Egypt at the 2020 Summer Olympics (null).