Sir Charles Dilke

E878815

Sir Charles Dilke was a prominent 19th-century British Liberal politician and radical reformer who served in senior government roles before his career was derailed by a notorious scandal.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Sir Charles Dilke canonical 1

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf British politician
human
birthName Charles Wentworth Dilke NERFINISHED
causeOfDeath heart disease
countryOfCitizenship United Kingdom
dateOfBirth 1843-09-04
dateOfDeath 1911-01-26
describedBySource 19th-century British political history
educatedAt Cambridge University NERFINISHED
Trinity Hall, Cambridge NERFINISHED
familyName Dilke NERFINISHED
father Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, 1st Baronet NERFINISHED
givenName Charles
honorificPrefix Sir
ideology Liberalism NERFINISHED
radical liberalism
knownFor advocacy of republicanism in Britain
involvement in the Crawford–Dilke divorce scandal
radical Liberal politics
support for social and electoral reform
languageSpoken English
memberOfPoliticalParty Liberal Party (UK) NERFINISHED
movement British radicalism
nobleTitle Baronet in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom
notableEvent Crawford–Dilke divorce case NERFINISHED
notableWork Greater Britain NERFINISHED
Problems of Greater Britain NERFINISHED
occupation politician
writer
parliamentaryConstituency Chelsea NERFINISHED
parliamentaryGroup Liberal Party (UK) NERFINISHED
parliamentaryTermStart 1868
placeOfBirth Chelsea, London, England NERFINISHED
placeOfDeath London, England
politicalFocus extension of local government
franchise reform
housing reform
trade union rights
positionHeld Member of Parliament for Chelsea
President of the Local Government Board
Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs NERFINISHED
religion agnosticism
residence Sloane Street, Chelsea, London NERFINISHED
spouse Emilia Francis Strong NERFINISHED
Katherine Mary Eliza (Kate) Fanny Baird NERFINISHED
title 2nd Baronet
workLocation Westminster, London NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

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