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  1. Russell's only postwar biographer, John Prest, produced important unpublished material but paid little attention to his views or to many of his policy initiatives. Twenty years ago Derek Beales almost took up the challenge; but in the event Joseph II's gain has been Russell's loss. Recent work, which he has largely inspired, has helped to ...

  2. Su abuelo paterno era lord John Russell, primer conde de Russell, quien fue dos veces primer ministro con la reina Victoria. Su abuelo materno era Edward Stanley, 2.º barón Stanley de Alderley. Además, era ahijado de John Stuart Mill , quien ejerció ―aunque jamás conoció a Russell― una profunda influencia en su pensamiento político a través de sus escritos.

  3. John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, KG, GCMG, PC (18 August 1792 – 28 May 1878) was an English Whig and Liberal politician. He served twice as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in the mid-19th century. Biography. Russell was known as "Lord John Russell", which is called a courtesy title.

  4. John Russell, 1st Earl of Bedford KG PC JP ( c. 1485 – 14 March 1555) was an English royal minister in the Tudor era. He served variously as Lord High Admiral and Lord Privy Seal.

  5. Lord John Russell was born in London into one of the leading Whig families; his father became 6th Duke of Bedford in 1802. Born prematurely, he remained puny throughout his life, and ill-health as a child meant that he was educated mostly by private tutors, including Edmund Cartwright, inventor of the power-loom.

  6. 8 de ene. de 2017 · LordJohn Russell and Parliamentary Reform, 1848-67 FOR over a century after his death, Lord John Russell was remembered above all as a politician who failed to appreciate when it was time to get off the stage. He was widely agreed to have peaked at some point in the 1840s - Gladstone put it even earlier, at his leadership of the Commons

  7. LordJohn Russell and Parliamentary Reform, 1848-67 FOR over a century after his death, Lord John Russell was remembered above all as a politician who failed to appreciate when it was time to get off the stage. He was widely agreed to have peaked at some point in the 1840s - Gladstone put it even earlier, at his leadership of the Commons