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  1. Charles Pelham Villiers (3 January 1802 – 16 January 1898) was a British lawyer and politician from the aristocratic Villiers family. He sat in the House of Commons for 63 years, from 1835 to 1898, making him the longest-serving Member of Parliament (MP). He also holds the distinction of the oldest candidate to win a parliamentary ...

  2. Charles Pelham Villiers, statesman, born on 3 January 1802 in Upper Grosvenor Street, London, was third son of George Villiers (1759-1827), by his wife, Theresa Parker (d. 1855), only daughter of John, first baron Boringdon.

  3. Charles Pelham Villiers was the third son of George Villiers, fourth Earl of Clarendon. 1 Villiers attended Kensington School of Thomas Wright Hill and East India College as a young boy, and then studied law at St John's College at Cambridge in 1820. 2 He graduated with an MA in 1827, and was called to the bar the same year. 3 Throughout his career in law, Villiers primarily addressed issues ...

  4. 16 de mar. de 2017 · Charles Pelham Villiers: Aristocratic Victorian Radical. This book provides the first biographical study of Charles Pelham Villiers (1802-1898), whose long UK parliamentary career...

  5. Member of the Whig Party. From 1835-1885, Charles Villiers was MP for the single constituency of Wolverhampton and then from 1885 until his death in 1898 as MP for Wolverhampton South (Bilston). Villiers stood for election for the Whig Party in Wolverhampton in January 1835. Having won that contest he was re-elected in 1837.

  6. CHARLES PELHAM VILLIERS1 When Charles Villiers's speeches on free trade were collected in 1883 the editor concluded his introduction with the prophecy that ' when in the fulness of time history shall be so revealed to posterity, the figure of Charles Pelham Villiers will stand out from among his contemporaries with a clearness greater even than it

  7. Charles Pelham Villiers (3 January 1802 – 16 January 1898) was a British lawyer and politician from the aristocratic Villiers family. He sat in the House of Commons for 63 years, from 1835 to 1898, making him the longest-serving Member of Parliament (MP).