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  1. Marjie Bloy, Ph. D., Senior Research Fellow, the Victorian Web. Robert Banks Jenkinson, second Earl of Liverpool, served as Prime Minister from 8 June 1815 to 9 April 1827. He was born in London on 7 June 1770, he was the only child born to Charles Jenkinson, first Earl of Liverpool and his first wife Amelia Watts.

  2. 23 de oct. de 2019 · Liverpool’s greatest challenges as prime minister were, first, winning the war, and, later, dealing with its consequences. The disastrous French invasion of Russia in 1812 weakened the French, but it did not finish off now-emperor Napoleon. Liverpool knew his limitations and did not micromanage British armed efforts.

  3. Top left: Robert Walpole is considered the first prime minister of Great Britain. Top right: Winston Churchill was prime minister during World War II. Bottom left: Margaret Thatcher was the first female prime minister of the United Kingdom. Bottom right: Rishi Sunak is the incumbent, and first British Asian prime minister.

  4. 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 ...

  5. Liverpool's even greater interest in Lawrence's branch of the fine arts had important consequences for national policy. In the 1820s the celebrated amateur, Sir George Beaumont, who was the chief advocate of a national gallery of painting, asked his friend Lord Dover to bring the matter to the attention of the Prime Minister.

  6. 2nd Earl of Liverpool. The English statesman Robert Barks Jenkinson, 2d Earl of Liverpool (1770-1828), served as prime minister from 1812 to 1827 and was at the center of governmental decisions during more than a quarter century of foreign and domestic crises. The eldest son of Charles Jenkinson, Robert Jenkinson was born in London on June 7, 1770.

  7. He is most famous for being Britain's longest-serving 19th Century Prime Minister, occupying the position for almost 15 years. 18 June, 1790 - Liverpool elected to parliament as MP for Rye.