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  1. Mary Anne Disraeli, 1st Viscountess Beaconsfield (née Evans; 11 November 1792 – 15 December 1872) was a British peeress and society figure who was the wife of the British statesman Benjamin Disraeli.

    • Mary Anne Evans, 11 November 1792
    • .mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin2px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-2px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin3px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-3px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-display-ws{display:inline;white-space:nowrap}, Benjamin Disraeli ​(m. 1839)​
    • 15 December 1872 (aged 80)
  2. 9 de ene. de 2015 · Biography books. This article is more than 9 years old. A political romance: Benjamin and Mary Anne Disraeli. She was wealthy, idiosyncratic and in search of love; he was younger and deep...

    • Daisy Hay
  3. Disraeli's political views embraced certain Radical policies, particularly electoral reform, and also some Tory ones, including protectionism. He began to move in Tory circles. In 1834 he was introduced to the former Lord Chancellor, Lord Lyndhurst, by Henrietta Sykes, wife of Sir Francis Sykes.

    • William Ewart Gladstone
    • Conservative
  4. Name variations: Viscountess Beaconsfield; Marianne or Mary Anne Evans. Born November 11, 1792, in Exeter, England; died on December 15, 1872, in Buckinghamshire, England; daughter of John Evans and Eleanor (Viney) Evans; married Wyndham Lewis, in January 1815 (died 1838); married Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881, prime minister of England), in ...

  5. 27 de mar. de 2015 · By Daisy Hay. Farrar Straus Giroux. 308 pp. $27. Unlike most contemporary couples, whose sweet nothings vanish into the electronic ether almost as soon as they're exchanged, famed British prime...

    • Becky Krystal
  6. 5 de ene. de 2015 · Mary Anne Evans, 12 years Disraeli’s senior, was the daughter of a Devon sailor, given to sentimental and eccentric fantasies. She claimed, for instance, that she was a barefoot factory...

  7. “My wife is a very clever woman,” Benjamin said, “but she can never remember who came first, the Greeks or the Romans.” An unusual story of Victorian romance and politics, Mr. and Mrs. Disraeli moves beyond the anecdotes to reveal the interior life of one of Britain's most influential couples.