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  1. 16 de ago. de 2020 · Biography. Robert Banks Jenkinson Earl of Liverpool became known for repressive measures introduced to restore order, but he also steered the country through the period of radicalism and unrest ...

  2. 1808 succeeded as 2nd Lord Liverpool. 1809-1812 Secretary for War and the Colonies. 1812-1827 First Lord of the Treasury (and Prime Minister) Born in London, 7 June, 1770 and dying there 4 December, 1828, Liverpool was a reluctant First Lord of the Treasury (and Prime Minister), coming to office on the assassination (11 May, 1812) of Prime ...

  3. Robert Jenkinson, the eldest son of the first Earl of Liverpool, was born on 7th June, 1770. He was educated at Charterhouse and Christ Church, Cambridge. At the age of twenty Robert was granted the seat of Appleby, a pocket borough owned by Sir James Lowther. Robert Jenkinson was a Tory and in May 1793, he spoke against Earl Grey's attempt to ...

  4. Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2e comte de Liverpool, né le 7 juin 1770 à Londres et mort le 4 décembre 1828 à Kingston upon Thames, est un homme d'État britannique qui est Premier ministre du Royaume-Uni durant plus de 14 ans, de 1812 à 1827. En tant que Premier ministre, il appela à des mesures répressives au niveau national pour maintenir l ...

  5. 15 de sept. de 2021 · Robert Banks Jenkinson (generally known as Lord Liverpool in the context of the National Gallery) was the son of Charles Jenkinson, 1st Earl of Liverpool and Amelia Watts, daughter of William Watts, a senior East India Company official. As the serving Prime Minister in 1824, he was among the first group of trustees to the Gallery.

  6. Robert Banks Jenkinson, second Earl of Liverpool, served as Prime Minister from 8 June 1815 to 9 April 1827. He was born in London on 7 June 1770, he was the only child born to Charles Jenkinson, first Earl of Liverpool and his first wife Amelia Watts.

  7. Less cynical than Tallyrand, more imaginative than Metternich, as creative as Guizot, Lord Liverpool was one of the great European conservatives of his age. He served as prime minister for the longest continuous term in nineteenth-century Britain and presided over the triumphant years of the Napoleonic War, the strife-torn era of the "Peterloo" massacre, and the founding of the great liberal ...