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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).
Lord John Russell was fond of quoting an old Whig axiom that "parties were like snails, for with them it is the tail that moves the head". He hardly could have surmised that to save itself the tail will strike off the head. If not the head of the "last Whig cabinets", he was indisputably the head of the Whig Party. Burke said once that.
Namnteckning. John Russell, 1:e earl Russell, mest bekant under sin tidigare titel lord John Russell och son till John Russell, som sedermera skulle efterträda sin bror som hertig av Bedford, var en av Englands mest berömda statsmän. Han föddes 18 augusti 1792 i London och avled 28 maj 1878 på lantgodset Pembroke Lodge vid Richmond .
The English statesman and Whig leader Lord John Russell entered politics at an early age. He was 21 years old when he became a member of Parliament. He became prime minister at 54. Russell, son of the duke of Bedford, was born on Aug. 18, 1792, in London, England. He was educated at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Russell works as a freelance photographer, specializing in "political photography, event photography, charity commissions and landscapes". In 2006, he was in-house photographer for Total Politics magazine and also works for the Liberal Democrats, the London Wildlife Trust, other charities, and individuals. He publishes work at Zenfolio.
Russell, John. Russell, John (1710–71), 4th duke of Bedford , politician and lord lieutenant of Ireland, was born 30 September 1710 at the family seat at Streatham, Surrey, England, second son of Wriothesley Russell (d. 1711), 2nd duke of Bedford, and Elizabeth Russell (née Howland).
Lord Grey's first announcement as Prime Minister was a pledge to carry out parliamentary reform. On 1 March 1831, Lord John Russell brought forward the Reform Bill in the House of Commons on the government's behalf. The bill disfranchised 60 of the smallest boroughs, and reduced the representation of 47 others.