Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir William Morton Eden, 7th and 5th Baronet JP DL (4 April 1849 – 20 February 1915) was a British politician and artist. His third son was Anthony Eden, 1st Earl of Avon, who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom . Early life. Portrait of his wife, Sybil Frances Grey, by John Singer Sargent, 1905.

  2. Abstract: The distinctive role played by William Eden in the penal reform debate of the late eighteenth century is examined and his emphasis on leniency in the exercise of punishment is identified.

  3. Auckland, William Eden, 1st Baron (1744–1814). Politician and diplomat. A younger son of the well-known Durham family, Eden trained as a lawyer after leaving Oxford. He entered Parliament in 1774 for Woodstock and quickly established himself as a useful man, with a particular interest in economic matters and in penal reform.

  4. William Frederick Elliot Eden (19 January 1782 – January 1810) was a British soldier, politician and Member of Parliament, serving as Teller of the Exchequer.

  5. William Eden, 1st Baron Auckland. Frederick Eden, 6th Baron Auckland, on 2 March 1920. Baron Auckland is a title in both the Peerage of Ireland and the Peerage of Great Britain. The first creation came in 1789 when the prominent politician and financial expert William Eden [1] was made Baron Auckland in the Peerage of Ireland.

  6. EDEN, William, 1st Baron Auckland [I] (1744-1814), of Eden Farm, Beckenham, Kent. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1790-1820, ed. R. Thorne, 1986. Available from Boydell and Brewer.

  7. Lord, lord / lôrd/ • n. someone or something having power, authority, or influence: lord of the sea | lords of the jungle. ∎ (in the UK) a man of noble ran… Feudalism, A series of contractual relationships between the upper classes, designed to maintain control over land. Feudalism flourished between the tenth and t… House Of Lords, Lords, House of Lords, House of.