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  1. Henry Du Pré Labouchère (9 November 1831 – 15 January 1912) was an English politician, writer, publisher and theatre owner in the Victorian and Edwardian eras. He is now most remembered for the Labouchère Amendment, which for the first time criminalised all male homosexual activity in the United Kingdom.

  2. 27 de nov. de 2017 · En 1885, Henry Labouchère impulsó una ley que criminalizaba la homosexualidad masculina en Gran Bretaña. Oscar Wilde, buen conocido suyo, fue una de sus víctimas.

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  3. Labouchere, Henry (1798–1869), Baron Taunton , chief secretary for Ireland (18467), was born 15 August 1798, the eldest son of Pierre César Labouchère (d. 1839), a wealthy clothing merchant of Hylands, Essex, and Over Stowey, Somerset, and his wife Dorothy, third daughter of Sir Francis Baring.

  4. Much like Lulu Baxter Guy's "The Black Man's Burden," Henry Labouchère's "The Brown Man's Burden" shifts the emphasis of Kipling's notorious poem, offering a view of imperialism from the perspective of those who were most directly affected by the expansionist policies of nations like Britain and the United States.

  5. Truth was a British periodical publication founded by the diplomat and Liberal politician Henry Labouchère. The first issue was published on 4 January 1877. Labouchère founded the periodical after he left a virtual rival publication, The World.

  6. Henry Du Pré Labouchere was a British politician, publicist, and noted wit who gained journalistic fame with his dispatches from Paris (for the Daily News, London, of which he was part owner) while the city was under siege during the Franco-German War (1870–71).

  7. Henry Du Pre Labouchere. Theatrical enterprises in Twickenham. 1831 - 1912. Henry du Pre Labouchere (from the George Grantham Bain collection held by the Library of Congress) Radical, agnostic and a rebel. Henry Labouchere's ancestors were Huguenots who fled from France to Holland.