Difference between revisions of "Sir Robert Walpole"

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Sir Robert Walpole <ref name="term_81351" />  
 
<p> Earl of Orford, Whig statesman, born at Houghton, Norfolk, educated at Eton and Cambridge; entered [[Parliament]] in 1701, and became member for King's Lynn in 1702; was favoured by the Whig leaders, and promoted to office in the Cabinet; was accused of corruption by the opposite party when in power, and committed to the Tower; on his release after acquittal was re-elected for King's Lynn; in 1715 became First Lord of the Treasury, and in 1721 became [[Prime]] Minister, which he continued to be for twenty-one years, but not without opposition on account of his pacific policy; on being driven against his will into a war with Spain, which proved unsuccessful, he retired into private life; he stood high in repute for his financial policy; it was he who established the first Sinking Fund, and who succeeded as a financier in restoring confidence after the bursting of the [[South Sea Bubble]] ( <i> q. v </i> .); it is to his policy in defeating the plans of the [[Jacobites]] that the Hanoverian dynasty in great part owe their permanent occupancy of the British throne; it was a favourite maxim of his. "Every man has his price," and he was mortified to find that Pitt could not be bought by any bribe of his (1677-1745). </p>
The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_81351" />
==References ==
<p> [[Earl]] of Orford, Whig statesman, born at Houghton, Norfolk, educated at [[Eton]] and Cambridge; entered [[Parliament]] in 1701, and became member for King's Lynn in 1702; was favoured by the Whig leaders, and promoted to office in the Cabinet; was accused of corruption by the opposite party when in power, and committed to the Tower; on his release after acquittal was re-elected for King's Lynn; in 1715 became First Lord of the Treasury, and in 1721 became [[Prime]] Minister, which he continued to be for twenty-one years, but not without opposition on account of his pacific policy; on being driven against his will into a war with Spain, which proved unsuccessful, he retired into private life; he stood high in repute for his financial policy; it was he who established the first Sinking Fund, and who succeeded as a financier in restoring confidence after the bursting of the [[South Sea Bubble]] ( <i> q. v </i> .); it is to his policy in defeating the plans of the [[Jacobites]] that the Hanoverian dynasty in great part owe their permanent occupancy of the British throne; it was a favourite maxim of his. "Every man has his price," and he was mortified to find that Pitt could not be bought by any bribe of his (1677-1745). </p>
 
== References ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="term_81351"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/walpole,+sir+robert Sir Robert Walpole from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_81351"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/walpole,+sir+robert Sir Robert Walpole from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
</references>
</references>

Revision as of 13:29, 12 October 2021

The Nuttall Encyclopedia [1]

Earl of Orford, Whig statesman, born at Houghton, Norfolk, educated at Eton and Cambridge; entered Parliament in 1701, and became member for King's Lynn in 1702; was favoured by the Whig leaders, and promoted to office in the Cabinet; was accused of corruption by the opposite party when in power, and committed to the Tower; on his release after acquittal was re-elected for King's Lynn; in 1715 became First Lord of the Treasury, and in 1721 became Prime Minister, which he continued to be for twenty-one years, but not without opposition on account of his pacific policy; on being driven against his will into a war with Spain, which proved unsuccessful, he retired into private life; he stood high in repute for his financial policy; it was he who established the first Sinking Fund, and who succeeded as a financier in restoring confidence after the bursting of the South Sea Bubble ( q. v .); it is to his policy in defeating the plans of the Jacobites that the Hanoverian dynasty in great part owe their permanent occupancy of the British throne; it was a favourite maxim of his. "Every man has his price," and he was mortified to find that Pitt could not be bought by any bribe of his (1677-1745).

References