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  1. 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 ...

  2. William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne (15 March 1779 – 24 November 1848) was a Prime Minister of the United Kingdom . Lamb was elected to Parliament in 1806 as a member of the Whig party. Lamb served as Irish Secretary in the government. Lamb became Lord Melbourne when his father died. His family home was in Melbourne in Derbyshire.

  3. This painting is one of three portraits of William Lamb (1789–1848), Lord Melbourne, held in the Art and Heritage Collection. Lamb was the Whig prime minister of England at the time Victoria ascended the throne in 1837, and he became the inexperienced young queen’s close friend and chief political advisor. Queen Victoria made him the […]

  4. Artist Malcolm Stewart (1829–1916) was a reputable English portrait painter. This portrait is signed ‘Malcolm Stewart, 1906 after Partridge’, a reference to John Partridge (1789–1872), who painted an almost identical portrait of William Lamb in 1844, which now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in London.

  5. Parents. Frederick Ponsonby, 3rd Earl of Bessborough. Lady Henrietta Spencer. Lady Caroline Lamb (née Ponsonby; 13 November 1785 – 25 January 1828) was an Anglo-Irish aristocrat and novelist, best known for Glenarvon, a Gothic novel. In 1812, she had an affair with Lord Byron, whom she described as "mad, bad, and dangerous to know".

  6. 第2代 メルバーン子爵 ウィリアム・ラム ( 英語: William Lamb, 2nd Viscount of Melbourne, PC, FRS 、 1779年 3月15日 - 1848年 11月24日 )は、 イギリス の 政治家 、 貴族 、 弁護士 。. グレイ伯爵 退任後の ホイッグ党 を指導し、ホイッグ党政権の 首相 を2度にわたって務め ...

  7. Prime Minister Melbourne was a Whig MP from 1806, Irish Secretary under Canning and Home Secretary under Lord Grey, 1830-34. After Grey's resignation he was appointed Prime Minister, a position he held twice (1834, 1835-41). He married the poet Lady Caroline Lamb in 1805 but they separated in 1825 following her infamous affair with the Romantic poet Lord Byron. Melbourne advised the young ...