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  1. 25 de mar. de 2015 · Carson, who had been knighted in 1896, was made a baron in 1921 and in the same year became Lord of Appeal in Ordinary – a position he held until 1929. Carson died in October 1935. Edward Carson was the ‘uncrowned king’ of Protestants in Ireland. Edward Carson became the prime mover in Ulster’s anti-Home Rule campaign. Carson was bor.

  2. Edward Carson, né le 9 février 1854 à Dublin et mort le 22 octobre 1935 dans le Kent, baron Carson, est avocat, juge et homme politique anglo-irlandais. Biographie [ modifier | modifier le code ] Protestant, Edward Carson devient député unioniste à la Chambre des communes en 1892 [ 1 ] .

  3. A 12ft statue of Sir Edward Carson was unveiled at Stormont in 1933. The course of Irish history changed 100 years ago with the decision of Sir Edward Carson to stand down from the unionist ...

  4. Edward Henry, Baron Carson, (born Feb. 9, 1854, Dublin, Ire.—died Oct. 22, 1935, Minster, Kent, Eng.), Irish lawyer and politician. In 1892 he was elected to the British House of Commons and was appointed Irish solicitor general. He served as British solicitor general (1900–05), attorney general (1915), first lord of the Admiralty (1916 ...

  5. It describes Edward Carson's successful tour of Britain to gather more support for the Ulster cause and highlights the growing pessimism regarding the prospects of violence in Ireland by 1914. It explains that during this time, Carson was considered to have greater power over public opinion than any of his colleagues.

  6. Edward Carson. Edward Henry Carson (ook: Baron Carson) ( 9 februari 1854 – 22 oktober 1935) was een protestants politicus in Ierland in het einde van de negentiende eeuw, begin van de twintigste eeuw. Hij was leider van de Ierse Unionistische partij.

  7. 21 de mar. de 2016 · Four days after the dramatic launch of the anti-home rule campaign at Craigavon on 23 September 1911, where Sir Edward Carson was ‘delivered to his people’, Fred Oliver, a keen Unionist, passionate federalist and peddler of various constructive political initiatives, wrote to Geoffrey Robinson, editor of The Times.