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  1. The Harley (or Oxford–Bolingbroke) ministry was the British government that existed between 1710 and 1714 in the reign of Queen Anne. It was headed by Robert Harley (from 1711, Earl of Oxford) and composed largely of Tories. Harley was a former Whig who had changed sides, bringing down the seemingly powerful Whig Junto and their moderate Tory ...

  2. Información del artículo Robert Harley and the ministerial revolution of 1710 The ministerial revolution of 1710 transformed a predominantly whig administration in April to a tory-dominated ministry by September.

  3. A week earlier, on 10 Dec. 1697, in a committee of the whole on the King’s Speech, Harley had raised the question of disbandment, following the Peace of Ryswick. According to one observer, he ‘opened the debate on that part relating to the army, and showed the danger and mischief of a standing army in time of peace’.

  4. Morales Harley, R. (2012). Medea de Eurípides, un análisis desde la perspectiva de algunas teorías modernas de la cultura . Revista de Lenguas Modernas de la Universidad de Costa Rica , (37), 131-155.

  5. ¿Cuál es el tipo de personalidad de Robert Harley de las 16 personalidades? Descubre la personalidad, eneagrama y signo zodiacal en el almaverso, base de datos de personalidad de celebridades y personajes ficticios.

  6. 1 de feb. de 2006 · I T is a familiar fact that Robert Harley belongs among the first politicians to exercise deliberate control over the distribution of propaganda. 1 Students of the early eighteenth century have also come to know that Daniel Defoe, while acting as an agent for Harley, made an extensive fact-finding journey around England from July to November 1705.

  7. 23 de may. de 2023 · Another contemporary compared Robert Harley with the shrewdness of Oliver Cromwell by stating that he ‘spends more in spies than Cromwell ever did’.2 Certainly, Robert Harley had a personal reputation for the values that might well be thought essential to any early modern intelligencer: he was devious, full of trickery, and all too fond of secrecy.