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  1. 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.

  2. John Russell, 1.º Conde Russell KG, GCMG, PC ( Londres, 18 de agosto de 1792 — Ibid., 28 de maio de 1878 ), conhecido como Lorde John Russell antes de 1861, foi um político whig e liberal britânico, por duas vezes foi Primeiro-ministro do Reino Unido .

  3. John Russell (Londres, 18 de agosto de 1792-Surrey, 28 de mayo de 1878) fue un político británico, conocido como Lord John Russell. Fue el abuelo del filósofo Bertrand Russell . Quick facts: John Russell, Primer ministro del Reino Unid...

  4. Food & Drink. from. £185.00. per adult. The area. 96 Marchmont Street Cartwright Gardens, London WC1N 1AG England. Neighbourhood: Bloomsbury. Snuggly nestled within Central London is academic and leafy Bloomsbury, an area that boasts walking distance access to many of London's most popular attractions.

  5. Hace 4 días · John (Russell), Lord Russell His large monument of alabaster and marble shows his effigy reclining in his ermine-lined red Parliamentary robes, with his head supported on his elbow. There are columns and many shields of arms (including those of Russell, De la Tour, Meschems, Herring, Froxmere, Wise, Sapcote, Semark and Cook).

  6. Lord John Russell served as Prime Minister from 30 June 1846 to 21 February 1852 and from 29 October 1865 to 26 June 1866. He was born on 8 August 1792, the third son of the sixth Duke of Bedford. He was educated at Westminster School and the University of Edinburgh. When he was fully grown, Russell stood only 5' 4¾" tall and weighed about 8 ...

  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