Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Robert Walpole, 1st earl of Orford ジェントリ階級の出身. 1676年のノーフォークのグレートダナム(Great Dunham, Norfolk)に、同じ名前の父ロバート・ウォルポール大佐の三男として生まれました。ジェントリ階級の出身です。

  2. Robert Walpole, 1er comte d'Orford est un homme d'État du Parti whig britannique, et le premier véritable Premier ministre de Grande-Bretagne. Bien que ce terme n'existe pas à l'époque, on peut dire, à considérer son pouvoir au sein du gouvernement, qu'il en assure de facto le rôle entre 1721 et 1742.

  3. 20 de nov. de 2014 · Walpole’s father had been a Whig, a supporter of the 1688 to 1689 ‘Glorious Revolution’ which gave Britain a constitutional monarchy. Robert junior inherited those views, although he was also perceived as a political moderate and an efficient administrator. The rise, fall, and rise of Walpole. His political rise was swift.

  4. Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford, (August 26, 1676 – March 18, 1745) was a British statesman who is generally regarded as having been the first Prime Minister of Great Britain. This position had no official recognition in law, but Walpole is nevertheless acknowledged as having held the de facto office due to the extent of his influence in the Cabinet.

  5. 26 de ene. de 2022 · Robert Walpole was born in 1676, the son of a Norfolk landowner. He attended Eton College and then Cambridge University, where he studied law. After university, Walpole entered politics and quickly rose through the ranks. In 1701, he was elected to Parliament as a representative for Castle Rising. Walpole’s political career was marked by ...

  6. 17 de mar. de 2021 · By Andrew Gimson. Robert Walpole, who took office on 3 April 1721 and is by convention regarded as the first of the 55 prime ministers to have guided this country’s fortunes over the past three centuries, was at ease with sex and money and self-enrichment at public expense. A famous caricature of him, entitled “Idol-Worship, or The Way to ...

  7. Sir Robert was very worried that the King might think he was no longer powerful enough to remain First Minister, since the defeats on the South Sea affair had occurred so soon after the excise controversy. Hervey, Memoirs, 1, 197. The clearest description of this episode is found in Plumb, Sir Robert Walpole, 11, 275–9.