List of ambassadors of Sweden to Argentina

On 1 October 1906, the position of consul general was combined with that of the head of the Swedish legation to the Argentine Republic, with a jurisdiction limited to that state.[1] From 1918, the minister in Buenos Aires was also accredited in Santiago (Chile) and Montevideo (Uruguay).[2] In January 1957, an agreement was reached between the Swedish and Argentine governments on the mutual elevation of the respective countries' legations to embassies.The diplomatic rank was thereafter changed to ambassador instead of envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary.[3] Today the Swedish ambassador in Argentina is also accredited to Paraguay and Uruguay.
Lesser coat of armsKingdom of SwedenMinistry for Foreign AffairsSwedish Embassy, Buenos AiresHis or Her ExcellencyMinister for Foreign AffairsBuenos AiresArgentinaGovernment of SwedenTerm lengthpresident of Argentinagovernment of Argentinaministeralso accreditedSantiagoMontevideolegationsembassiesdiplomatic rankambassadorenvoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiaryResident ministerAsunciónChristian GüntherEinar ModigWilhelm WintherSven Fredrik HedinKarl-Anders WollterBengt Friedmandual accreditationLa PazCharlotte WrangbergGufran Al-NadafBarbro ElmLuis Federico LeloirCarlos MenemTeresa ParodiMauricio MacriJorge FaurieArgentina–Sweden relationsEmbassy of Sweden, Buenos AiresSantiago PeñaSELIBRNational Archives of SwedenSvenska DagbladetElgenstierna, GustafSydsvenska DagbladetSvenskt biografiskt lexikonDagens NyheterAlgeriaAngolaAustraliaAustriaBangladeshBelarusBelgiumBoliviaBrazilBulgariaBurkina FasoCanadaColombiaDemocratic Republic of the CongoCzech RepublicDenmarkEthiopiaFinlandFranceGermanyGreeceHungaryIcelandIndonesiaIrelandIsraelKazakhstanLebanonLiberiaLiechtensteinMexicoMoroccoNetherlandsNew ZealandNigeriaNorth KoreaNorwayPakistanPhilippinesPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaRwandaSaudi ArabiaSerbiaSingaporeSouth AfricaSouth KoreaSwitzerlandTanzaniaThailandTunisiaTurkeyUgandaUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited KingdomUnited StatesVenezuelaVietnamZambiaCzechoslovakiaSoviet UnionYugoslavia