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  1. Less cynical than Tallyrand, more imaginative than Metternich, as creative as Guizot, Lord Liverpool was one of the great European conservatives of his age. He served as prime minister for the longest continuous term in nineteenth-century Britain and presided over the triumphant years of the Napoleonic War, the strife-torn era of the "Peterloo" massacre, and the founding of the great liberal ...

  2. Robert Banks Jenkinson (1770-1828) Second Earl of Liverpool from 1808. Prime Minister, 1812-27. Foreign Secretary, 1801-4. Home Secretary, 1804-6, 1807-9. Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, 1809-12.

  3. Robert Jenkinson, 2. hrabě z Liverpoolu (7. června 1770 Londýn – 4. prosinec 1828 Surrey) byl britský státník, člen strany Toryů a premiér. Jeho vláda byla známá prováděním represivních opatření, která měla zajistit veřejný pořádek, ale také provedením země obdobím radikalismu a nepokojů, které následovaly po napoleonských válkách .

  4. Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool, was a British statesman and both the youngest and longest-serving Prime Minister (1812–27) since 1806. Background The eldest son of Charles Jenkinson, Robert Jenkinson was born in London on June 7, 1770.

  5. Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool (7 June 1770–4 December 1828) was an English politician and the longest serving Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Robert Walpole held office for longer, but only as Prime Minister of Great Britain) During his time as Prime Minister from 1812 to 1827, Liverpool became known for the harsh rules he put in place to restore order, but he also led ...

  6. Liverpool, Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of (1770–1828) in A Dictionary of World History (2) Length: 136 words in World Encyclopedia Length: 79 words

  7. This title provides a biography of the longest-serving Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool, who held the post from 1812 to 1827. He steered Britain through the end of the Napoleonic Wars, through periods of unrest through Catholic emancipation.