Lord Sidmouth

E223244

Lord Sidmouth, born Henry Addington, was a British Tory statesman who served as Prime Minister from 1801 to 1804 and later held senior government roles, including Home Secretary, during the early 19th century.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Lord Sidmouth canonical 2

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Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf British politician
Home Secretary of the United Kingdom
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
human
birthDate 1757-05-30
birthName Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth
surface form: Henry Addington
birthPlace Holborn, London, England
countryOfCitizenship Kingdom of Great Britain
United Kingdom
deathDate 1844-02-15
deathPlace Richmond Park, Surrey, England
educatedAt Brasenose College, Oxford
Winchester College
familyName Addington
father Anthony Addington
givenName Henry
honorificPrefix The Right Honourable
ideology conservatism
languageSpoken English
memberOfParliamentFor Bossiney
Devizes
memberOfPoliticalParty Conservative Party (UK)
surface form: Tory Party
monarchDuringTerm George III of the United Kingdom
surface form: George III

George IV of the United Kingdom
surface form: George IV
mother Mary Hiley
nobleTitle Viscount Sidmouth
notableFor repressive domestic policies as Home Secretary
role in legislation restricting civil liberties after the Napoleonic Wars
signing the Treaty of Amiens
officeEnd Home Secretary of the United Kingdom, 1822
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, 1804
officeStart Home Secretary of the United Kingdom, 1812
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, 1801
parliamentaryBody House of Commons of Great Britain
House of Commons of the United Kingdom
positionHeld Chancellor of the Exchequer
Home Secretary
surface form: Home Secretary of the United Kingdom

Leader of the House of Commons
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Speaker of the House of Commons
precededBy William Pitt the Younger
religion Anglicanism
residence Richmond Park, Surrey, England
surface form: Richmond Park, Surrey
spouse Ursula Mary Hammond
succeededBy William Pitt the Younger

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Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.