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  1. Biographie. George Hamilton-Gordon est, après la chute de Napoléon Bonaparte, un des signataires du traité avec Louis XVIII ; fait partie du cabinet du duc de Wellington et de Robert Peel (1834 et 1841), et préside un cabinet mixte composé de whigs ; de peelistes et de radicaux, qui fait conclure une alliance offensive et défensive avec la France (1852-1855).

  2. This head and shoulders portrait was copied for Queen Victoria from Winterhalter’s picture of the reception of Louis-Philippe (see RCIN 401378). George Hamilton-Gordon was Foreign Secretary 1828-30 and 1841-6, and Prime Minister 1852-5. He was a cultivated and well-travelled man and President of the Society of Antiquaries for more than 30 years. Queen Victoria acquired the Balmoral estate in ...

  3. George Hamilton-Gordon, 6th Earl of Aberdeen (10 December 1841 – 27 January 1870), styled Lord Haddo from 1860 to 1864, was a Scottish peer and sailor. Hamilton-Gordon settled for a time in Richmond, Maine , where he took jobs cutting ice and clerking at a store (where it is reported he lost his temper at being fired and told his employer that he "could buy and sell him many times over ...

  4. 12 de abr. de 2024 · George Hamilton Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen (1784-1860), Prime Minister. Early Victorian Portraits Catalogue Entry. Sitter associated with 57 portraits Skilful and conciliatory Foreign Secretary from 1841-46, Gordon supported Peel over the repeal of the Corn Laws, forming a coalition ministry of Whigs and Peelites in 1852.

  5. George Hamilton-Gordon was born on 28 January 1784 in Edinburgh. He was the eldest son and first of seven children born to George Gordon, Lord Haddo, and Charlotte Baird. Aberdeens father died in 1791 and his mother in 1795. Scottish law allowed orphans who had reached the age of fourteen to name their own guardians; Aberdeen appointed Pitt the ...

  6. 18 de mar. de 2018 · George Hamilton Gordon, later the Earl of Aberdeen, had a short-lived term in the highest office. While he managed to pass a number of reforms, he was brought down by his handling of the Crimean ...

  7. George Hamilton-Gordon, 6th Earl of Aberdeen (1841–1870); died unmarried. Mary Hamilton-Gordon (1844–1914); married Walter Hepburne-Scott, 8th Lord Polwarth. James Henry Hamilton-Gordon (1845–1868); committed suicide, which was passed off as a rifle accident, in his rooms in Cambridge.