Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Henry John Temple, Tử tước Palmerston thứ 3 (20 tháng 10 năm 1784 – 18 tháng 10 năm 1865) là chính khách người Anh hai lần giữ chức Thủ tướng vào giữa thế kỷ 19. Trong khoảng từ năm 1830 đến năm 1865 ông nắm quyền chính sách đối ngoại của Anh khi nước Anh trong đỉnh cao của sự cường thịnh.

  2. Lord Palmerston's speech was so successful that Perceval, who formed his government in 1809, asked him to become Chancellor of the Exchequer, then a less important office than it was to become from the mid nineteenth century. Lord Palmerston preferred the office of Secretary at War, charged exclusively with the financial business of the army.

  3. Henry Temple. Některá data mohou pocházet z datové položky. Henry Temple, 3. vikomt Palmerston, ( 20. říjen 1784 – 18. říjen 1865) byl britský státník, který po dvě funkční období zastával funkci premiéra. Většinou je uváděn jako lord Palmerston. V různých vládních funkcích působil téměř nepřetržitě od roku ...

  4. Henry John Temple, 3 e vicomte Palmerston, plus connu sous le nom de lord Palmerston, né le 20 octobre 1784 à Westminster et mort le 18 octobre 1865 à Brocket Hall (Hertfordshire), est un homme d'État britannique, souvent présent au gouvernement de 1809 à 1865, deux fois premier ministre, évoluant au cours de sa carrière du conservatisme au libéralisme.

  5. Palmerston's hostility towards the French certainly improved his reputation with Queen Victoria, who wrote, 'Lord Palmerston is very stout and right about our neighbour'. The fortifications, such as Fort Nelson on the downs above Portsmouth and Spitbank Fort in the Solent, are still impressive today.

  6. He was elected in 1807 for a pocket borough in the Isle of Wight and subsequently represented Cambridge University 1811–31, Bletchingley 1831–2, Hampshire South 1832–4, and Tiverton 1835–65.Palmerston was perhaps the most famous foreign secretary of the 19th cent. He began his long career as a lord of Admiralty 1807–9 and then served ...

  7. A thousand people had been shipped off by Lord Palmerston's agents, who promised them clothes and from £2 to £5 a family on their arrival at Quebec. When they arrived they 'were in a state of fearful destitution'. Ferrie said, 'the last cargo of human beings which was received from Lord Palmerston's estate was by the Lord Ashburton '.