Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Goderich, Frederick John Robinson, Viscount and 1st Earl of Ripon (1782–1859) (1782–1859).Prime minister. Educated at Harrow and St John's College, Cambridge, Goderich sat as a moderate Tory for Carlow in 1806 and for Ripon, 1807–27. He held a number of offices—lord of Admiralty 1810–12, vice‐president of the Board of Trade 1812 ...

  2. November, 1 1782 – January 28, 1859. Frederick John Robinson (1782-1859) First Viscount Goderich from 1827. First Earl of Ripon from 1833. President of the Board of Trade, 1818-23, 1841-43. Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1823-27. Secretary of State for War and the Colonies 1827, 1830-33.

  3. PM Frederick John Robinson is depicted in the painting "Het trappenhuis van de Londense woning van de schilder" (the staircase of the London residence of the painter) painted by Pieter Christoffel Wonder in 1828. I did research on this painting in 2014 and identified PM FJ Robinson, Sir Henry Frederick Cooke and King George IV.

  4. Frederick John Robinson, 1st Earl of Ripon PC (1 November 1782 – 28 January 1859) was a British statesman and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (when he was known as Lord Goderich). Titles. Frederick John Robinson (1782 – 1827) The Viscount Goderich (1827 – 1833) The Earl of Ripon (1833 – 1859)

  5. John Frederick Robinson (born December 29, 1954), known professionally as JR, is an American drummer and session musician who has been called "one of the most recorded drummers in history". He is known for his work with producer Quincy Jones , including Michael Jackson 's multi-platinum Off the Wall album and the charity single " We Are the World ". [1]

  6. For most of his long life he was known either as Frederick Robinson or the Earl of Ripon. It was only for a six-year stretch, which included his premiership, that he was known as Goderich. He was born on 30 October 1782, the second of three sons of the 2nd Baron Grantham, and his much younger wife, Lady Mary Jemina Grey Yorke, daughter of the 2nd Earl of Hardwicke.

  7. Robinson was genial, clever, ambitious and idle. As the younger son of a peer who had died when he was four, he was financially dependent until his mother’s death in 1830, which terminated the trust fund set up by his father, on handouts from her and his brother, his wife’s inheritance and income from political office.