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  1. Frederick William John Augustus Hervey, 7th Marquess of Bristol ( / ˈhɑːrvi / "Harvey"; [2] 15 September 1954 – 10 January 1999), also known as John Jermyn and John Bristol, [3] was a British hereditary peer, aristocrat and businessman. Although he inherited a large fortune, he died almost penniless from funding a chronic and ...

  2. John Hervey, 2nd Baron Hervey, PC (13 October 1696 – 5 August 1743) was an English courtier and political writer. Heir to the Earl of Bristol , he obtained the key patronage of Walpole , and was involved in many court intrigues and literary quarrels, being apparently caricatured by Pope and Fielding .

  3. His second son, John Augustus Hervey, Lord Hervey, was a captain in the Royal Navy and also served as ambassador to Florence. He predeceased his father. His daughter, the Hon. Elizabeth Catherine Caroline Hervey (1780–1803), married Charles Ellis, later first Baron Seaford .

  4. 18 de jan. de 1999 · Frederick William John (‘Johnny’) Augustus Hervey, the 7th Marquess of Bristol, died on cue as a terrible example of inherited wealth and title, as if to give point to the government moves ...

  5. 12 de mar. de 2024 · John Hervey, Baron Hervey (born October 15, 1696—died August 5, 1743, Ickworth, Suffolk, England) was a politician and wit whose Memoirs of the Reign of George the Second are of first importance and, along with the writings of Horace Walpole, are largely responsible for many of posterity’s impressions of 18th-century England.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Hervey's later attitudes toward women show a continuation of this preliminary relation to his mother. Of Lady Bristol herself he wrote 1 John, Lord Hervey, Some Materials Towards Memoirs of the Reign of King George 11, ed. Romney Sedgwick, 3 vols. (London, 1931), p. xv. (All quotations from the body of the Memoirs are from this edition.

  7. 29 de jun. de 2021 · John Hervey, 2 nd Baron Hervey, is one such person. He was a prominent—one may even say infamous— courtier during the reign of George I and II. In the latter’s reign particularly, he was a royal favourite—the “child, pupil, and charge” of Queen Caroline. [1]