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  1. Viscount Melbourne (William Lamb), 1779-1848. Right from his London birth on 15 March 1779, at Melbourne House in Piccadilly, William Lamb, second Viscount Melbourne, was at the centre of Whig social circles. The second son of Peniston Lamb, first Viscount Melbourne, he followed a normal early life for sons of Whig magnates Eton, Cambridge ...

  2. Lamb, William. Lamb, William (1779–1848), 2nd Viscount Melbourne , chief secretary for Ireland and British prime minister, was born 15 March 1779 at Brocket Hall, Hertfordshire, the second son of Peniston Lamb, 1st Viscount Melbourne, and his wife, Elizabeth Lamb (née Milbanke). Because of his mother's infidelity there is much doubt about ...

  3. Share William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne quotations about religion and character. ... (1829), in H. Dunckley 'Lord Melbourne' (1890) ch. 9 8 Copy quote.

  4. William Lamb, Lord Melbourne. William Lamb, 2e vicomte de Melbourne (d'où le Lord Melbourne ), né à Londres le 15 mars 1779 et mort dans le Hertfordshire le 24 novembre 1848 est un homme politique britannique, un des derniers représentants du courant aristocratique des whigs et connu surtout comme le mentor politique de la reine Victoria .

  5. Born on 15 March 1779, he was the second of six surviving children born to Elizabeth Lamb (née Milbanke), Lady Melbourne. Only the eldest of these — Peniston — appears to have been fathered by her husband Peniston Lamb, the First Viscount Melbourne (originally in the Irish peerage). A complaisant husband, he allowed all six to be brought ...

  6. William Lamb, the second Lord Melbourne and Viscount Melbourne was born on the 15th March 1779 in London. He studied at Trinity College, Cambridge and in Glasgow. For a time he entertained the idea of joining the legal profession, but instead became the Whig MP for Leominster in 1805.

  7. William Lamb, the future Lord Melbourne, was born on March 15, 1779, in London. His mother was known for her beauty and wit and used these attributes to win a prominent place in society for the family. Lamb attended Eton and Cambridge. He was interested in literature and enjoyed writing poetry and plays, but he chose law for his career.