Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Nicholson’s Pubs are known for their individual style, exciting stories, and charming personalities — and The Henry Addington is certainly no exception. Our heritage is tied up with that of Canary Wharf – part of the West India Docks and the finest enclosed docks, which were once vital to the Port of London.

  2. Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth, PC (30 May 1757 – 15 February 1844) was a British Tory statesman who served as prime minister of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1804. This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations.

  3. Henry Addington byl synem Anthonyho Addingtona, lékaře Williama Pitta staršího, a Mary Addingtonové, dcery Havilanda Johna Hileyho, ředitele školy v Readingu. Z pozice svého otce byl v mládí přítelem Williama Pitta mladšího. Studoval na Winchesterské škole, později na Brasenose College v Oxfordu a nakonec právo na Lincoln's Inn.

  4. Henry Addington, 1º Visconde Sidmouth, PC (30 de maio de 1757 – 15 de fevereiro de 1844) foi um político britânico, primeiro-ministro do Reino Unido de 1801 a 1804. [1] Vida. Foi eleito para a Câmara dos Comuns em 1784 como membro do Parlamento (MP) por Devizes, [1] e depois tornou-se Orador da Casa dos Comuns em 1789.

  5. Fact file. Born London, 30 May, 1757, died Richmond (Surrey, England) 15 February, 1844. MP for Devizes 1784-1805. Created Viscount Sidmouth in 1805. Speaker in the House of Commons 1789-1801. Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer 1801-04. Lord President of the Council 1805.

  6. Letter to Hiley Addington (1 November 1804), quoted in Philip Ziegler, Addington: A Life of Henry Addington, First Viscount Sidmouth (1965), p. 227; I have said, and said most truly, that if the country was well governed, and its affairs ably conducted, I cared little in whose hands the Administration was placed.

  7. When Henry Addington was born in 1720, in Pennsylvania, British Colonial America, his father, John Addington, was 50 and his mother, Elizabeth Maddock, was 15. He married Sarah Elizabeth Burson in 1744, in Bucks, Pennsylvania, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 6 daughters.