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  1. OXFORD, ROBERT HARLEY. 1st Earl of (1661–1724), English statesman, commonly known by his surname of Harley, eldest son of Sir Edward Harley (1624–1700), a prominent landowner in Herefordshire, and grandson of the celebrated letter writer Lady Brilliana Harley (c. 1600–1643), was born in Bow Street, Covent Garden, London, on the 5th of December 1661.

  2. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Robert Harley (5 décembre 1661 – 21 mai 1724), 1 er comte d'Oxford et comte Mortimer , est un homme politique anglais de l'époque de la fin de la Révolution financière britannique . Biographie [modifier | modifier le code] D'abord élu du parti Whig , après avoir combattu aux côtés de Guillaume III d'Orange , lors de la Glorieuse ...

  3. 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 ...

  4. Robert Harley is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at UC Berkeley. Harley's research focuses on air quality and sustainable transportation. Harley is the inaugural holder of the Carl W. Johnson Endowed Chair in Civil and Environmental Engineering at Berkeley, awarded in recognition of his record of scholarship and university and professional service.

  5. View the profiles of people named Robert Harley. Join Facebook to connect with Robert Harley and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to...

  6. 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.

  7. 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.