The Monarchist 1.0
Defending the British Crown Commonwealth and the English-Speaking Peoples
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[+] HONOURING OUR PATRON, SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL, VICTOR OF THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING PEOPLES

[+] HONOURING OUR QUEEN, ELIZABETH THE SECOND, ON THE 80TH YEAR OF HER BIRTH (1926 - 2006)

[+] HONOURING OUR KING, SAINT EDWARD THE CONFESSOR, ON THE 1000TH YEAR OF HIS BIRTH (1005 - 2005)

[+] HONOURING OUR HERO, LORD NELSON, ON THE BICENTENNIAL OF THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR (1805 - 2005)

[+] HONOURING OUR SONS, THE QUEEN'S COMMONWEALTH SOLDIERS KILLED IN THE 'WAR ON TERROR'

[+] HONOURING OUR VETS ON THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE VICTORIA CROSS (1856 - 2006)

Saturday, January 08, 2005
Palmerston

Honouring Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, KG, GCB, PC (17841865)

Viscount Palmerston was a British statesman who served twice as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in the mid 19th century. He was in government office almost continuously from 1807 until his death in 1865, beginning his parliamentary career as a Tory and concluding it as a Liberal.

He is remembered primarily for having directed British foreign policy through most of a 35-year period when the United Kingdom was at the height of its power, serving terms as Foreign Secretary and Prime Minister during this period. His achievements in the field of foreign relations were many and some of his aggressive measures, especially those that are now considered liberal interventionist, drew both support and criticism in his own time and subsequently.

For the first twenty years of his career, Palmerston was chiefly known as a man of fashion, and as a subordinate minister without influence on the general policy of the cabinets he served. Some of the most humorous poetical pieces in the New Whig Guide were from his pen, and he was entirely devoted, like his friends Peel and Croker, to the Tory party of that day. Palmerston never was a real Whig, still less a Radical: he was a politician of the old English aristocratic type, liberal in his sentiments, favourable to the march of progress, but entirely opposed, at least domestically, to the claims of democratic government.

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