Information about Benjamin Disraeli
| The Rt Hon Benjamin Disraeli | ||
| Monarch | Victoria | |
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | ||
| Succeeded by | ||
| Political party | Conservative | |
| Religion | Church of England |
|
"Disraeli" redirects here. For the biographical film about Benjamin Disraeli, see Disraeli (film).
Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield, KG, PC, FRS (born Benjamin D'Israeli; 21 December 1804–19 April 1881) was a British Conservative statesman and literary figure. He served in government for three decades, twice as Prime Minister—the first and thus far only person of Jewish parentage to do so (although Disraeli was baptised in the Anglican Church at 13). Disraeli's most lasting achievement was the creation of the modern Conservative Party after the Corn Laws schism of 1846.
Although a major figure in the protectionist wing of the Conservative Party after 1844, Disraeli's relations with the other leading figures in the party, particularly Lord Derby, the overall leader, were often strained. Not until the 1860s would Derby and Disraeli be on easy terms, and the latter's succession of the former assured. From 1852 onwards, Disraeli's career would also be marked by his often intense rivalry with William Gladstone, who eventually rose to become leader of the Liberal Party. In this duel, Disraeli was aided by his warm friendship with Queen Victoria, who came to detest Gladstone during the latter's first premiership in the 1870s. In 1876 Disraeli was raised to the peerage as the Earl of Beaconsfield, capping nearly four decades in the House of Commons.
Before and during his political career, Disraeli was well-known as a literary and social figure, although his novels are not generally regarded as a part of the Victorian literary canon. He mainly wrote romances, of which Sybil and Vivian Grey are perhaps the best-known today. He was and is unusual among British Prime Ministers for having gained equal social and political renown.
Early life
Disraeli was descended from Italian Sephardic Jews on both sides of his family, although he claimed Spanish ancestry, possibly referring to the ultimate origin of his family heritage in Spain prior to the expulsion of Jews in 1492.[1] His father was the literary critic and historian Isaac D'Israeli who, though Jewish, in 1817 had Benjamin baptised in the Church of England, following a dispute with their synagogue. The elder D'Israeli (Benjamin changed the spelling in the 1820s by dropping the foreign-looking apostrophe) himself was content to remain outside organized religion.[2] Benjamin at first attended a small school, the Reverend John Potticary's school at Blackheath[3] (later to evolve into St Piran's School). Beginning in 1817, Benjamin attended Higham Hall, in Walthamstow. His younger brothers, in contrast, attended the superior Winchester College, a fact that grated on Disraeli and may explain his dislike of his mother, Maria D'Israeli.His father groomed him for a career in law, and Disraeli was articled to a solicitor in 1821. Law was, however, uncongenial, and by no later than 1825 he had given it up. His health at the time was uncertain, and in 1824 Isaac took his son abroad for a tour of Belgium (then part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands) and the Rhine Valley. Young Benjamin greatly enjoyed the experience, and later claimed that it was while travelling on the Rhine that he determined to abandon the law and seek fame and fortune: "I determined when descending those magical waters that I would not be a lawyer." [4] On his return to England he speculated on the stock exchange on various South American mining companies. The recognition of the new South American republics on the recommendation of George Canning had led to a considerable boom, encouraged by various promoters. In this connection, Disraeli became involved with the financier J. D. Powles, one such booster. In the course of 1825, Disraeli wrote three anonymous pamphlets for Powles, promoting the companies.[5]
That same year Disraeli's financial activities brought him into contact with the publisher John Murray who, like Powles and Disraeli, was involved in the South American mines. Accordingly, they attempted to bring out a newspaper, The Representative, to promote both the cause of the mines and those politicians who supported the mines, specifically Canning. The paper was a failure, in part because the mining "bubble" burst in late 1825, which ruined Powles and Disraeli. Also, according to Disraeli's biographer, Lord Blake, the paper was "atrociously edited", and would have failed regardless. Disraeli's debts incurred from this debacle would haunt him for the rest of his life.[6]
Literary career
Disraeli now turned towards literature, motivated in part by a desperate need for money, and brought out his first novel, Vivian Grey, in 1826. Disraeli's biographers agree that Vivian Grey was a thinly-veiled re-telling of the affair of the Representative, and it proved very popular on its release, although it also caused much offence within the Tory literary world when Disraeli's authorship was discovered. The book, initially anonymous, was purportedly written by a "man of fashion" – someone who moved in high society. Disraeli, then just twenty-three, did not move in high society, and the numerous solecisms present in Vivian Grey made this painfully obvious. Reviewers were sharply critical on these grounds of both the author and the book. Furthermore, Murray believed that Disraeli had caricatured him and abused his confidence–an accusation denied at the time, and by the official biography, although subsequent biographers (notably Blake) have sided with Murray.[7]After producing a Vindication of the English Constitution, and some political pamphlets, Disraeli followed up Vivian Grey by a series of novels, The Young Duke (1831), Contarini Fleming (1832), Alroy (1833), Venetia and Henrietta Temple (1837). During the same period he had also written The Revolutionary Epick and three burlesques, Ixion, The Infernal Marriage, and Popanilla. Of these only Henrietta Temple (based on his affair with Lady Henrietta Sykes) was a true success.
During the 1840s Disraeli wrote three political novels collectively known as "the Trilogy"–Sybil, Coningsby, and Tancred.
Disraeli's relationships with other male writers of his period, were strained or non-existent. After the disaster of the Representative John Gibson Lockhart was a bitter enemy and the two never reconciled.[8] Disraeli's preference for female company prevented the development of contact with those who were not alienated by his opinions, comportment, or background. One contemporary who tried to bridge the gap, William Makepeace Thackeray, established a tentative cordial relationship in the late 1840s only to see everything collapse when Disraeli took offence at a burlesque of him which Thackeray had penned for Punch. Disraeli took revenge in Endymion (published in 1880), when he caricatured Thackeray as "St. Barbe".[9]
Critic William Kuhn argued that much of Disraeli's fiction can be read as "the memoirs he never wrote," revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of Victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket – particularly with regard to his allegedly "ambiguous sexuality."[10]
Parliament
Disraeli had been considering a political career as early as 1830, before he departed England for the Mediterranean. His first real efforts, however, did not come until 1832, during the great crisis over the Reform Bill, when he contributed to an anti-Whig pamphlet edited by John Wilson Croker and published by Murray entitled England and France: or a cure for Ministerial Gallomania. The choice of a Tory publication was regarded as odd by Disraeli's friends and relatives, who thought him more of a Radical. Indeed, Disraeli had objected to Murray about Croker inserting "high Tory" sentiment, writing that "it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of Reform can issue from my pen." Further, at the time Gallomania was published, Disraeli was in fact electioneering in High Wycombe in the Radical interest.[11] Disraeli's politics at the time were influenced both by his rebellious streak and by his desire to make his mark. In the early 1830s the Tories and the interests they represented appeared to be a lost cause. The other great party, the Whigs, was anathema to Disraeli: "Toryism is worn out & I cannot condescend to be a Whig."[12]Though he initially stood for election, unsuccessfully, as a Radical, Disraeli was a Tory by the time he won a seat in the House of Commons in 1837 representing the constituency of Maidstone. The next year he settled his private life by marrying Mary Anne Lewis, the widow of Wyndham Lewis, Disraeli's erstwhile colleague at Maidstone.
Lord John Manners
Friend of Disraeli, and leading figure in the Young England movement
Friend of Disraeli, and leading figure in the Young England movement
Protection
Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel passed over Disraeli when putting together his government in 1841 and Disraeli, hurt, gradually became a sharp critic of Peel's government, often deliberately adopting positions contrary to those of his nominal chief.[14] The best known of these cases was the Maynooth grant in 1845 and the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846. The end of 1845 and the first months of 1846 were dominated by a battle in parliament between the free traders and the protectionists over the repeal of the Corn Laws, with the latter rallying around Disraeli and Lord George Bentinck. An alliance of pro free-trade Conservatives (the "Peelites"), Radicals, and Whigs carried repeal, and the Conservative Party split: the Peelites moved towards the Whigs, while a "new" Conservative Party formed around the protectionists, led by Disraeli, Bentinck, and Lord Stanley (later Lord Derby).This split had profound implications for Disraeli's political career: almost every Conservative politician with official experience followed Peel, leaving the rump bereft of leadership. As one biographer wrote, "[Disraeli] found himself almost the only figure on his side capable of putting up the oratorical display essential for a parliamentary leader."[15] Looking on from the House of Lords, the Duke of Argyll wrote that Disraeli "was like a subaltern in a great battle where every superior officer was killed or wounded."[16] If the remainder of the Conservative Party could muster the electoral support necessary to form a government, then Disraeli was now guaranteed high office. However, he would take office with a group of men who possessed little or no official experience, who had rarely felt moved to speak in the House of Commons before, and who, as a group, remained hostile to Disraeli on a personal level, his assault on the Corn Laws notwithstanding.[17]
Bentinck and the Leadership
In 1847 a small political crisis occurred which removed Bentinck from the leadership and highlighted Disraeli's differences with his own party. In the preceding general election, Lionel de Rothschild had been returned for the City of London. Ever since Catholic Emancipation, members of parliament were required to swear the oath "on the true faith of a Christian." Rothschild, an unconverted Jew, could not do so and therefore could not take his seat. Lord John Russell, the Whig leader who had succeeded Peel as Prime Minister and like Rothschild a member for the City of London, introduced a Jewish Disabilities Bill to amend the oath and permit Jews to enter Parliament.Disraeli spoke in favour of the measure, arguing that Christianity was "completed Judaism," and asking of the House of Commons "Where is your Christianity if you do not believe in their Judaism?"[18] While Disraeli did not argue that the Jews did the Christians a favor by killing Christ, as he had in Tancred and would in Lord George Bentinck[19], his speech was badly received by his own party,[20] which along with the Anglican establishment was hostile to the bill.[21] Samuel Wilberforce, Bishop of Oxford and a friend of Disraeli's, spoke strongly against the measure and implied that Russell was paying off the Jews for "helping" elect him.[22] Every member of the future protectionist cabinet then in parliament (except Disraeli) voted against the measure. One member who was not, Lord John Manners, stood against Rothschild when the latter re-submitted himself for election in 1849. Bentinck, then still Conservative leader in the Commons, joined Disraeli in speaking and voting for the bill, although his own speech was a standard one of toleration.[23]
In the aftermath of the debate Bentinck resigned the leadership and feuded with Stanley, leader in the Lords and overall leader, who had opposed the measure and directed the party whips–in the Commons–to oppose the measure as well. Bentinck was succeeded by Lord Granby; Disraeli's own speech, thought by many of his own party to be blasphemous, ruled him out for the time being.[24] Even as these intrigues played out, Disraeli was working with the Bentinck family to secure the necessary financing to purchase Hughenden Manor, in Buckingham county. This purchase allowed him to stand for the county, which was "essential" if one was to lead the Conservative Party at the time. He and Mary Anne alternated between Hughenden and several homes in London for the remainder of their marriage. These negotations were complicated by the sudden death of Lord George on September 21, 1848, but Disraeli obtained a loan of £25,000 (equivalent to almost £1,500,000 today) from Lord George's brothers Lord Henry Bentinck and Lord Titchfield.[25]
Within a month Granby resigned the leadership in the commons, feeling himself inadequate to the post, and the party functioned without an actual leader in the commons for the remainder of the parliamentary session. At the start of the next session, affairs were handled by a triumvirate of Granby, Disraeli, and John Charles Herries–indicative of the tension between Disraeli and the rest of the party, who needed his talents but mistrusted the man. This confused arrangement ended with Granby's resignation in 1851; Disraeli effectively ignored the two men regardless.[26]
Office
The first Derby government
Russell resumed office, but resigned again in early 1852 when a combination of the protectionists and Lord Palmerston defeated him on a Militia Bill.[28] This time Lord Derby (as he had become) took office, and to general surprise appointed Disraeli Chancellor of the Exchequer.[29] Disraeli had offered to stand aside as leader of the House of Commons in favour of Palmerston, but the latter declined.
The primary responsibility of a mid-Victorian chancellor was to produce a Budget for the coming fiscal year. Disraeli proposed to reduce taxes on malt and tea (indirect taxation); additional revenue would come from an increase in the house tax. More controversially, Disraeli also proposed to alter the workings of the income tax (direct taxation) by "differentiating"–i.e., different rates would be levied on different types of income.[30] The establishment of the income tax on a permanent basis had been the subject of much inter-party discussion since the fall of Peel's ministry, but no consensus had been reached, and Disraeli was criticised for mixing up details over the different "schedules" of income. Disraeli's proposal to extend the tax to Ireland gained him further enemies, and he was also hampered by an unexpected increase in defence expenditure, which was forced on him by Derby and Sir John Pakington (Secretary of State for War and the Colonies) (leading to his celebrated remark to John Bright about the "damned defences").[31] This, combined with bad timing and perceived inexperience led to the failure of the Budget and consequently the fall of the government in December of that year.[32]
Gladstone's final speech on the failed Budget marked the beginning of over twenty years of mutual parliamentary hostility, as well as the end of Gladstone's formal association with the Conservative Party. No Conservative reconciliation remained possible so long as Disraeli remained leader in the House of Commons.
Opposition
With the fall of the government Disraeli and the Conservatives returned to the opposition benches. Derby's successor as Prime Minister was the Peelite Lord Aberdeen, whose ministry was composed of both Peelites and Whigs. Disraeli himself was succeeded as chancellor by Gladstone.The second Derby government
Faced with a vacancy, Disraeli and Derby tried yet again to bring Gladstone into the government. Disraeli wrote a personal letter to Gladstone, asking him to place the good of the party above personal animosity: "Every man performs his office, and there is a Power, greater than ourselves, that disposes of all this…" In responding to Disraeli Gladstone denied that personal feelings played any role in his decision then and previously to accept office, while acknowledging that there were differences between him and Derby "broader than you may have supposed." Gladstone also hinted at the strength of his own faith, and the role it played in his public life, when he addressed Disraeli's most personal and private appeal:
| I state these points fearlessly and without reserve, for you have yourself well reminded me that there is a Power beyond us that disposes of what we are and do, and I find the limits of choice in public life to be very narrow.—W. E. Gladstone to Disraeli, 1858[35] |
With Gladstone's refusal Derby and Disraeli looked elsewhere and settled on Disraeli's old friend Edward Bulwer-Lytton, who became Secretary of State for the Colonies; Derby's son Lord Stanley, succeeded Ellenborough at the Board of Control. Stanley, with Disraeli's assistance, proposed and guided through the house the India Act, under which the subcontinent would be governed for sixty years. The East India Company and its Governor-General were replaced by a viceroy and the Indian Council, while at Westminster the Board of Control was abolished and its functions assumed by the newly-created India Office, under the Secretary of State for India.[36]
The 1867 Reform Bill
Prime Minister
First government
However, the Conservatives were still a minority in the House of Commons, and the passage of the Reform Bill required the calling of new election once the new voting register had been compiled. Disraeli's term as Prime Minister would therefore be fairly short, unless the Conservatives won the general election. He made only two major changes in the cabinet: he replaced Lord Chelmsford as Lord Chancellor with Lord Cairns, and brought in George Ward Hunt as Chancellor of the Exchequer. Disraeli and Chelmsford had never got along particularly well, and Cairns, in Disraeli's view, was a far stronger minister.[40]
Disraeli's first premiership was dominated by the heated debate over the established Church of Ireland. Although Ireland was (and remains) overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, the Protestant Church remained the established church and was funded by direct taxation. An initial attempt by Disraeli to negotiate with Cardinal Manning the establishment of a Roman Catholic university in Dublin foundered in March when Gladstone moved resolutions to dis-establish the Irish Church altogether. The proposal divided the Conservative Party while reuniting the Liberals under Gladstone's leadership. While Disraeli's government survived until the December general election, the initiative had passed to the Liberals, who were returned to power with a majority of 170.[41]
Second government
Imperialism

Disraeli and Queen Victoria, during the latter's visit to Hughenden at the height of the Eastern crisis.
Disraeli and Gladstone clashed over Britain's Balkan policy. Disraeli saw the situation as a matter of British imperial and strategic interests, keeping to Palmerston's policy of supporting the Ottoman Empire against Russian expansion. Gladstone, however, saw the issue in moral terms, for Bulgarian Christians had been massacred by the Turks and Gladstone therefore believed it was immoral to support the Ottoman Empire.
A leading proponent of the Great Game, Disraeli introduced the Royal Titles Act, which created Queen Victoria Empress of India, putting her at the same level as the Russian Tsar. In his private correspondence with the Queen, he proposed "to clear Central Asia of Muscovites and drive them into the Caspian".[42] In order to contain Russia's influence, he launched an invasion of Afghanistan and signed the Cyprus Convention with Turkey, whereby this strategically placed island was handed over to Britain.
Disraeli scored another diplomatic success at the Congress of Berlin in 1878, in preventing Bulgaria from gaining full independence, limiting the growing influence of Russia in the Balkans and breaking up the League of the Three Emperors. However, difficulties in South Africa (epitomised by the defeat of the British Army at the Battle of Isandlwana), as well as Afghanistan, weakened his government and led to his party's defeat in the 1880 election.
Title and death
Disraeli was elevated to the House of Lords in 1876 when Queen Victoria (who liked Disraeli both personally and politically) made him Earl of Beaconsfield and Viscount Hughenden.In the general election of 1880 Disraeli's Conservatives were defeated by Gladstone's Liberals, in large part owing to the uneven course of the Second Anglo-Afghan War. Disraeli became ill soon after and died in April 1881. He is buried in a vault beneath St Michael's Church in the grounds of his home Hughenden Manor, accessed from the churchyard. Against the outside wall of the church is a memorial erected in his honour by Queen Victoria. His literary executor, and for all intents and purposes his heir, was his private secretary, Lord Rowton.
Personal life and family
Benjamin was the second child and eldest son of Isaac D'Israeli and Maria Basevi. His siblings included Sarah (1802–1859), Naphtali (1807), Ralph (1809–1898), and James (1813–1868).[43]Before his entrance into parliament Disraeli was involved with several different women, most notably Lady Henrietta Sykes (the wife of Sir Francis Sykes, Bt), who served as the model for Henrietta Temple. His relationship with Henrietta would eventually cause him serious trouble beyond the usual problems associated with a torrid affair. It was Henrietta who introduced Disraeli to Lord Lyndhurst, with whom she later became romantically involved. As Lord Blake observed: "The true relationship between the three cannot be determined with certainty…there can be no doubt that the affair [figurative usage] damaged Disraeli and that it made its contribution, along with many other episodes, to the understandable aura of distrust which hung around his name for so many years."[44]
Disraeli's Judaism
Although born of Jewish parents, Disraeli was baptised in the Christian faith at the age of thirteen, and remained an observant Anglican for the rest of his life.[45] At the same time, he considered himself ethnically Jewish and did not view the two positions as incompatible.Disraeli's governments
- First Disraeli ministry (February–December 1868)
- Second Disraeli ministry (February 1874–April 1880)
Works by Disraeli
Fiction
- Vivian Grey (1826; Vivian Grey, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- Popanilla (1828; Popanilla, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- The Young Duke (1831)
- Contarini Fleming (1832)
- Alroy (1833)
- The Infernal Marriage (1834)
- Ixion in Heaven (1834)
- The Revolutionary Epick (1834)
- The Rise of Iskander (1834; The Rise of Iskander, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- Henrietta Temple (1837)
- Venetia (1837; Venetia, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- The Tragedy of Count Alarcos (1839); The Tragedy of Count Alarcos, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- Coningsby, or the New Generation (1844; Coningsby, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- Sybil, or The Two Nations (1845; Sybil or, The Two Nations, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- Tancred, or the New Crusade (1847)
- Lothair (1870; Lothair, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- Endymion (1880; Endymion, available at Project Gutenberg.)
- Falconet (book) (unfinished 1881)
Non-fiction
- An Inquiry into the Plans, Progress, and Policy of the American Mining Companies (1825)
- Lawyers and Legislators: or, Notes, on the American Mining Companies (1825)
- The present state of Mexico (1825)
- England and France, or a Cure for the Ministerial Gallomania (1832)
- What Is He? (1833)
- The Letters of Runnymede (1836)
- Lord George Bentinck (1852)
Films featuring Disraeli
Statue in Parliament Square, London
- Disraeli (1929) George Arliss (Best Actor Oscar), Joan Bennett
- The Prime Minister (1941) John Gielgud
- The Mudlark (1950) Alec Guinness
- Disraeli (1978) Ian McShane, Mary Peach
- Mrs. Brown (1997) Sir Antony Sher
Notes
1. ^ Blake, 3. Norman Gash, reviewing Blake's work, argued that Benjamin's claim to Spanish ancestry could not be entirely dismissed. Gash, review of Disraeli, 360–364
2. ^ Opponents, however, continued to include the apostrophe in correspondence. Lord Lincoln, writing to Sir Robert Peel in 1846, referred to "D'Israeli." Conacher, "Peel and the Peelites, 1846–1850," 435. Peel did so as well, see Gash, Peel, 387. Even in the 1870s, towards the end of Disraeli's career, this practice continued. See Wohl, 381, ff. 22.
3. ^ Rhind, I, 157.
4. ^ Blake, 22.
5. ^ Blake, 24–26; Veliz, 637–663
6. ^ Blake, 33-34.
7. ^ Graubard, 139.
8. ^ Cline, "Disraeli and John Gibson Lockhart," 134–137.
9. ^ Cline, "Disraeli and Thackeray," 404–408. This view has been accepted by most historians. See Merritt, 85–88, who argues that St. Barbe was an attack on Thomas Carlyle.
10. ^ Dugdale, "Strike out."
11. ^ Robert Blake, Disraeli, (New York, 1966), 84–86.
12. ^ Blake, 87
13. ^ Trevelyan, 207. The specific occasion was the 1852 Budget. Disraeli seems to have held out the possibility of Bright, Richard Cobden, and Thomas Milner Gibson eventually joining the cabinet in exchange for the support of the Radicals.
14. ^ Peel's reasons for doing so are disputed. Some historians suggest Edward Stanley's well-known antipathy to Disraeli as the prime factor. Robert Blake dismisses these claims, arguing instead that Peel's need to balance the various factions of the Conservative Party, and the heavy preponderance of aristocrats within the cabinet, precluded Disraeli's inclusion. See Cline, "Disraeli and Peel's 1841 Cabinet" 509–512 and Blake, 165–166.
15. ^ Blake, 247
16. ^ Quoted in Blake, 247–248
17. ^ Blake, 260.
18. ^ Hansard, 3rd Series, xcv, 1321-1330, December 16, 1847.
19. ^ Disraeli, Benjamin (1852). Lord George Bentinck: A Political Biography (2nd ed.). Colburn and Co., 488-489. DOI:10.1007/b62130. ISBN 354063293X.
20. ^ On the other hand, both Russell and Gladstone thought it was brave for Disraeli to speak as he did. Morley, 501-502.
21. ^ Of the 26 Anglican bishops and archbishops who sat in the House of Lords, 23 voted on the measure altogether, and 17 were opposed.
22. ^ Hansard, 3rd Series, xcviii, 1374-1378, May 25, 1848.
23. ^ Blake, 259-260.
24. ^ Blake, 261-262.
25. ^ Blake, 251-254.
26. ^ Blake, 266-269.
27. ^ Blake, 301–305.
28. ^ Palmerston got his "tit for tat" with "Johnny Russell," who under pressure from the Crown had dismissed Palmerston from the Foreign Office the previous December.
29. ^ The expectation had been that Disraeli would assume the Foreign or Home offices.
30. ^ Ghosh, 269–273; Matthew, "Budgets," 621.
31. ^ Bright's diary quotes the conversation in full. See Trevelyan, 205–206
32. ^ On the centrality of the income tax, see Matthew, Gladstone, 121-122.
33. ^ Hawkins, 79–105.
34. ^ Blake, 379–382.
35. ^ Blake, 382–384.
36. ^ Blake, 385–386.
37. ^ Conancher, "The Emergence of British Parliamentary Democracy in the Nineteenth Century", 177
38. ^ Quoted in Blake, 473.
39. ^ Blake, 485–487.
40. ^ Blake, 487–489.
41. ^ Blake, 496–502.
42. ^ Quoted from Disraeli's letter to the Queen in Mahajan, 53.
43. ^ Ibid, 3.
44. ^ Ibid, 116–119.
45. ^ Blake, 11. See also Endelman, 115.
2. ^ Opponents, however, continued to include the apostrophe in correspondence. Lord Lincoln, writing to Sir Robert Peel in 1846, referred to "D'Israeli." Conacher, "Peel and the Peelites, 1846–1850," 435. Peel did so as well, see Gash, Peel, 387. Even in the 1870s, towards the end of Disraeli's career, this practice continued. See Wohl, 381, ff. 22.
3. ^ Rhind, I, 157.
4. ^ Blake, 22.
5. ^ Blake, 24–26; Veliz, 637–663
6. ^ Blake, 33-34.
7. ^ Graubard, 139.
8. ^ Cline, "Disraeli and John Gibson Lockhart," 134–137.
9. ^ Cline, "Disraeli and Thackeray," 404–408. This view has been accepted by most historians. See Merritt, 85–88, who argues that St. Barbe was an attack on Thomas Carlyle.
10. ^ Dugdale, "Strike out."
11. ^ Robert Blake, Disraeli, (New York, 1966), 84–86.
12. ^ Blake, 87
13. ^ Trevelyan, 207. The specific occasion was the 1852 Budget. Disraeli seems to have held out the possibility of Bright, Richard Cobden, and Thomas Milner Gibson eventually joining the cabinet in exchange for the support of the Radicals.
14. ^ Peel's reasons for doing so are disputed. Some historians suggest Edward Stanley's well-known antipathy to Disraeli as the prime factor. Robert Blake dismisses these claims, arguing instead that Peel's need to balance the various factions of the Conservative Party, and the heavy preponderance of aristocrats within the cabinet, precluded Disraeli's inclusion. See Cline, "Disraeli and Peel's 1841 Cabinet" 509–512 and Blake, 165–166.
15. ^ Blake, 247
16. ^ Quoted in Blake, 247–248
17. ^ Blake, 260.
18. ^ Hansard, 3rd Series, xcv, 1321-1330, December 16, 1847.
19. ^ Disraeli, Benjamin (1852). Lord George Bentinck: A Political Biography (2nd ed.). Colburn and Co., 488-489. DOI:10.1007/b62130. ISBN 354063293X.
20. ^ On the other hand, both Russell and Gladstone thought it was brave for Disraeli to speak as he did. Morley, 501-502.
21. ^ Of the 26 Anglican bishops and archbishops who sat in the House of Lords, 23 voted on the measure altogether, and 17 were opposed.
22. ^ Hansard, 3rd Series, xcviii, 1374-1378, May 25, 1848.
23. ^ Blake, 259-260.
24. ^ Blake, 261-262.
25. ^ Blake, 251-254.
26. ^ Blake, 266-269.
27. ^ Blake, 301–305.
28. ^ Palmerston got his "tit for tat" with "Johnny Russell," who under pressure from the Crown had dismissed Palmerston from the Foreign Office the previous December.
29. ^ The expectation had been that Disraeli would assume the Foreign or Home offices.
30. ^ Ghosh, 269–273; Matthew, "Budgets," 621.
31. ^ Bright's diary quotes the conversation in full. See Trevelyan, 205–206
32. ^ On the centrality of the income tax, see Matthew, Gladstone, 121-122.
33. ^ Hawkins, 79–105.
34. ^ Blake, 379–382.
35. ^ Blake, 382–384.
36. ^ Blake, 385–386.
37. ^ Conancher, "The Emergence of British Parliamentary Democracy in the Nineteenth Century", 177
38. ^ Quoted in Blake, 473.
39. ^ Blake, 485–487.
40. ^ Blake, 487–489.
41. ^ Blake, 496–502.
42. ^ Quoted from Disraeli's letter to the Queen in Mahajan, 53.
43. ^ Ibid, 3.
44. ^ Ibid, 116–119.
45. ^ Blake, 11. See also Endelman, 115.
References
- Blake, Robert (1966). Disraeli. New York: St. Martin's Press.
- Carter, Nick (June 1997). "Hudson, Malmesbury and Cavour: British Diplomacy and the Italian Question, February 1858 to June 1859". The Historical Journal 40 (2): 389-413.
- Cline, C.L. (February 1941). "Disraeli and John Gibson Lockhart". Modern Language Notes 56 (2): 134–137.
- Cline, C.L. (December 1939). "Disraeli and Peel's 1841 Cabinet". The Journal of Modern History 11: 509–512.
- Cline, C.L. (October 1943). "Disraeli and Thackeray". The Review of English Studies 19: 404–408.
- Conancher, J.B. (1971). The Emergence of British Parliamentary Democracy in the Nineteenth Century. New York: John Wiley and Sons.
- Conancher, J.B. (July 1958). "Peel and the Peelites, 1846–1850". The English Historical Review 73 (288): 431–452.
- Dugdale, John. Strike out. The Guardian Unlimited.
- Endelman, Todd M. (May 1985). "Disraeli's Jewishness Reconsidered". Modern Judaism 5 (2): 109–123.
- Gash, Norman (April 1968). "Review of Disraeli, by Robert Blake". The English Historical Review 83 (327): 360–364.
- Gash, Norman. Sir Robert Peel: The Life of Sir Robert Peel after 1830. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 0-87471-132-0.
- Ghosh, P.R. (April 1984). "Disraelian Conservatism: A Financial Approach". The English Historical Review 99: 268–296.
- Graubard, Stephen R. (October 1967). "Review of Disraeli, by Robert Blake". The American Historical Review 73 (1): 139.
- Hawkins, Angus (Spring 1984). "British Parliamentary Party Alignment and the Indian Issue, 1857–1858". The Journal of British Studies 23 (2): 79–105.
- Jerman, B.R.. The Young Disraeli. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Mahajan, Sneh (2002). British Foreign Policy, 1874-1914. Routledge.
- Matthew, H.C.G. (September 1979). "Disraeli, Gladstone, and the Politics of Mid-Victorian Budgets". The Historical Journal 22 (3): 615–643.
- Matthew, H.C.G. (1986). Gladstone, 1809-1874. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198229097.
- Merritt, James D. (June 1968). "The Novelist St. Barbe in Disraeli's Endymion: Revenge on Whom?". Nineteenth-Century Fiction 23 (1): 85–88.
- Parry, J.P. (September 2000). "Disraeli and England". The Historical Journal 43 (3): 699-728.
- Rhind, Neil (1993). Blackheath village and environs. London: Bookshop Blackheath. ISBN 0950513652.
- Seton-Watson, R.W. (1972). Disraeli, Gladstone, and the Eastern Question. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
- Trevelyan, G.M. (1913). The Life of John Bright. London: Constable.
- Veliz, Claudio (November 1975). "Egana, Lambert, and the Chilean Mining Associations of 1825". The Hispanic American Historical Review 55 (4): 637–663.
- Winter, James (January 1966). "The Cave of Adullam and Parliamentary Reform". The English Historical Review 81 (318): 38-55.
- Wohl, Anthony S. (July 1995). ""Dizzi-Ben-Dizzi": Disraeli as Alien". The Journal of British Studies 34 (3): 375-411.
External links
- Works by Benjamin Disraeli at Project Gutenberg
- Benjamin Disraeli Quotes
- Disraeli as the inventor of modern conservatism at The Weekly Standard
- More about Benjamin Disraeli on the Downing Street website.
- Hughenden Manor information at the National Trust
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Disraeli, Benjamin, Earl of Beaconsfield |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Disraeli, Benjamin, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | British politician |
| DATE OF BIRTH | 21 November 1804 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | London, England |
| DATE OF DEATH | 19 March 1881 |
| PLACE OF DEATH | London, England |
Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria; 24 May 1819 – 22 January 1901) was the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June 1837, and the first Empress of India from 1 May 1876, until her death on 22 January 1901.
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Conservative Party
Leader David Cameron
Founded Historical 1671, Modern 1830
Headquarters 30 Millbank, London SW1
Political Ideology Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Political Position Centre-right
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Leader David Cameron
Founded Historical 1671, Modern 1830
Headquarters 30 Millbank, London SW1
Political Ideology Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Political Position Centre-right
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The Church of England is the officially established Christian church[1] in England, and is the "mother" of the worldwide Anglican Communion, the oldest among its nearly 40 independent national churches.
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Disraeli is a 1929 film that was adapted by Julien Josephson and De Leon Anthony from a play by Louis N. Parker. The film was directed by Alfred E. Green.
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Disraeli is a 1929 film that was adapted by Julien Josephson and De Leon Anthony from a play by Louis N. Parker. The film was directed by Alfred E. Green.
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The Most Noble Order of the Garter is a medieval English order of chivalry or knighthood, and the pinnacle of the British honours system. Membership in it is limited to the Sovereign, the Prince of Wales and no more than twenty-four members, or Companions; men are known as Knights
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Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council is a body of advisors to the British Sovereign. The Privy Council was formerly a powerful institution, but its substantial decisions are now controlled by one of its committees, the Cabinet.
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Fellow of the Royal Society is an honour accorded to distinguished scientists and a category of membership of the Royal Society. Fellows are entitled to put the letters FRS after their name.
Up to 44 new fellows are elected each year by ballot of the existing fellows.
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Up to 44 new fellows are elected each year by ballot of the existing fellows.
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December 21 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland was the formal name of the United Kingdom from 1 January 1801 until 12 April 1927. It was formed by the merger of the Kingdom of Great Britain (itself having been a merger of the Kingdoms of England and Scotland) and the Kingdom of
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Conservative Party
Leader David Cameron
Founded Historical 1671, Modern 1830
Headquarters 30 Millbank, London SW1
Political Ideology Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Political Position Centre-right
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Leader David Cameron
Founded Historical 1671, Modern 1830
Headquarters 30 Millbank, London SW1
Political Ideology Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Political Position Centre-right
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Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
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Incumbent: The Right Honourable Gordon Brown, MP.
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Hebrew and Aramaic
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The vernacular language of the home nation in the Diaspora, significantly including English, Hebrew, Yiddish, and
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Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino, others
Liturgical languages:
Hebrew and Aramaic
Predominant spoken languages:
The vernacular language of the home nation in the Diaspora, significantly including English, Hebrew, Yiddish, and
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Baptism, from Greek βαπτίζω (baptízô), is a religious act of purification by water usually associated with admission to membership or fullness of membership of Christianity.
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Anglican Communion is a world-wide affiliation of Anglican Churches. There is no single "Anglican Church" with universal juridical authority, since each national or regional church has full autonomy.
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Conservative Party
Leader David Cameron
Founded Historical 1671, Modern 1830
Headquarters 30 Millbank, London SW1
Political Ideology Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Political Position Centre-right
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Leader David Cameron
Founded Historical 1671, Modern 1830
Headquarters 30 Millbank, London SW1
Political Ideology Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Political Position Centre-right
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states to the United Kingdom
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states to the United Kingdom
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Acts and Ordinances (Interregnum) to 1660
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Protectionism is the economic policy of restraining trade between nations, through methods such as tariffs on imported goods, restrictive quotas, a variety of restrictive government regulations designed to discourage imports, and anti-dumping laws in an attempt to protect domestic
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Edward George Geoffrey Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, KG, PC (29 March 1799 – 23 October 1869) was an English statesman, three times Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and to date the longest serving leader of the Conservative Party.
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William Ewart Gladstone (29 December 1809 – 19 May 1898) was a British Liberal Party statesman and Prime Minister (1868–74, 1880–85, 1886 and 1892–94).
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Liberal Party was one of the two major British political parties from the early 19th century until the 1920s, and a third party of varying strength and importance up to 1988, when it merged with the Social Democratic Party (the SDP) to form a new party which would become known as
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Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria; 24 May 1819 – 22 January 1901) was the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June 1837, and the first Empress of India from 1 May 1876, until her death on 22 January 1901.
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The Peerage is a system of titles of nobility in the United Kingdom, part of the British honours system.
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The Honourable the Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in Parliament assembled
Type Lower House
Speaker Michael Martin, (Non-affiliated)
since October 23, 2000
Leader Harriet Harman, (Labour)
since June 28, 2007
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Type Lower House
Speaker Michael Martin, (Non-affiliated)
since October 23, 2000
Leader Harriet Harman, (Labour)
since June 28, 2007
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Western canon is a term used to denote a of books, and, more widely, music and art, that has been the most influential in shaping Western culture. It asserts a compendium of the greatest Work of art of artistic merit.
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Sybil, or The Two Nations is an 1845 novel by Benjamin Disraeli. Published in the same year as Friedrich Engels's The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844, Sybil traces the plight of the working classes of England.
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Vivian Grey is Benjamin Disraeli's first novel, published in 1827. Originally published anonymously, ostensibly by a so-called "man of fashion," it caused a considerable sensation in London society.
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120 - 140 million (est.)
Regions with significant populations Italy 56 million (95% population of Italy)
Brazil [1]
Argentina
United States [2]
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Regions with significant populations Italy 56 million (95% population of Italy)
Brazil [1]
Argentina
United States [2]
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