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  1. Henry Addington was born on 30 May 1757. He was the eldest son and fourth of six children born to Dr Anthony Addington and Mary Hiley. Dr Addington included among his patients George III and Pitt the Younger. It was he who prescribed a bottle of port daily, to cure Pitt's gout. Addington was educated at Winchester school and Brasenose College ...

  2. 亨利·阿丁顿. 出生:1757年5月30日,伦敦霍尔本. 逝世:1844年2月15日,英格兰萨里郡列治文. 政党:托利党. 配偶:乌尔苏拉·玛丽·哈蒙德(Ursula Mary Hammond)、玛丽·安妮·汤森阁下(Hon Mary Anne Townsend). 第一代西德默斯子爵亨利·阿丁顿(Henry Addington,1st Viscount ...

  3. Henry I (germany), Henry I Henry I Henry I (876-936), or Henry the Fowler, was king of Germany from 919 to 936. The first monarch of the Saxon dynasty, he allowed auton… Henry Vii, HENRY VII (ENGLAND) (1457–1509; ruled 1485–1509), king of England. Henry Tudor, later earl of Richmond, was born in Pembroke Castle, Wales, on 28 Jan…

  4. Henry Addington was a prominent participant in national affairs from 1789 to 1824 particularly as Prime Minister of the conservative pro-peace and financial retrenchment government of 1801-1804 and as Home Secretary, 1812-1822, in which position he actively enforced the government's policy against political and economic unrest - the repression of the Luddites and the Peterloo Massacre being ...

  5. SIDMOUTH, HENRY ADDINGTON, 1st Viscount (1757–1844), English statesman, son of Dr Anthony Addington, was born on the 30th of May 1757. Educated at Winchester College and Brasenose College, Oxford, he graduated in 1778, and took the chancellor’s prize for an English essay in 1779.

  6. When Henry Addington was born in 1720, in Pennsylvania, British Colonial America, his father, John Addington, was 50 and his mother, Elizabeth Maddock, was 15. He married Sarah Elizabeth Burson in 1744, in Bucks, Pennsylvania, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 6 daughters.

  7. Letter to Hiley Addington (1 November 1804), quoted in Philip Ziegler, Addington: A Life of Henry Addington, First Viscount Sidmouth (1965), p. 227; I have said, and said most truly, that if the country was well governed, and its affairs ably conducted, I cared little in whose hands the Administration was placed.