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  1. Welcome to Robert Peel Primary School. Translate M. O. Translate / Traduire / Übersetzen / Tłumaczyć / Išversti / Tulkot / Traducir.

  2. Robert Peel. Robert Peel, 2.º Baronete ( Bury, 5 de fevereiro de 1788 — Londres, 2 de julho de 1850) foi um político britânico, primeiro-ministro de seu país de 10 de dezembro de 1834 a 8 de Abril de 1835 e de 30 de Agosto de 1841 a 29 de Junho de 1846 . Ajudou a criar o conceito moderno da força policial do Reino Unido.

  3. 29 de dez. de 2017 · Considered an arch-unionist, and at that time opposed to Catholic emancipation, he was nicknamed ‘Orange Peel’. In 1822 he became Home Secretary, after voluntarily resigning his position in ...

  4. 1 de abr. de 2024 · Political Affiliation: Conservative Party. Tory Party. Robert Peel (born February 5, 1788, Bury, Lancashire, England—died July 2, 1850, London) was a British prime minister (1834–35, 1841–46) and founder of the Conservative Party. Peel was responsible for the repeal (1846) of the Corn Laws that had restricted imports.

  5. 20 de mai. de 2022 · Robert Peel introduced the Metropolitan Police Act of 1829 and set up an organised police force for London, with 17 divisions, each with 4 inspectors and 144 constables. It was to be controlled from Scotland Yard, and answerable to the Home Secretary. Sir Robert Peel had already established the Royal Irish Constabulary in 1812, and it had ...

  6. Robert Peel (ur.5 lutego 1788 w Bury w Lancashire, zm. 2 lipca 1850 w Londynie) – brytyjski polityk, premier Wielkiej Brytanii w latach 1834-1835 oraz 1841-1846. Rząd Peela, który dziś określany jest jako konserwatywny (współczesna brytyjska Partia Konserwatywna uważana jest za polityczną spadkobierczynię stronnictwa Torysów), wprowadził ustawy promujące wolny handel.

  7. In 1822, Sir Robert Peel was appointed Home Secretary. He would become closely associated with penal reform in Britain. He is remembered especially for the formation of the Metropolitan London Police Force in 1829. Police constables were called ‘bobbies’ or ‘peelers’ in reference to Peel. Before Peel’s reforms, public order in London ...