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Prime Minister of the United Kingdom ( 1868 ; 1874-1880 )
" Disraeli " redirects here .
For other uses , see Disraeli ( disambiguation ) .
The Right Honourable The Earl of Beaconsfield KG PC DL JP FRS Disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office 20 February 1874 - 21 April 1880 Monarch Victoria Preceded by William Ewart Gladstone Succeeded by William Ewart Gladstone
In office 27 February 1868 - 1 December 1868 Monarch Victoria Preceded by The Earl of Derby Succeeded by William Ewart Gladstone Leader of the Opposition
In office 21 April 1880 - 19 April 1881 Monarch Victoria Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone Preceded by Marquess of Hartington Succeeded by The Marquess of Salisbury
In office 1 December 1868 - 17 February 1874 Monarch Victoria Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone Preceded by William Ewart Gladstone Succeeded by William Ewart Gladstone Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office 6 July 1866 - 29
February 1868 Prime Minister
The Earl of Derby Preceded by William Ewart Gladstone Succeeded by George Ward Hunt
In office 26
February 1858 - 11 June 1859 Prime Minister
The Earl of Derby Preceded by Sir George Cornewall Lewis Succeeded by William Ewart Gladstone
In office 27 February 1852 - 17 December 1852 Prime Minister
The Earl of Derby Preceded by Sir Charles Wood , 3rd Baronet Succeeded by William Ewart Gladstone Personal details Born Benjamin D' Israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 December 1804 Bloomsbury , Middlesex , England Died 19 April 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) Mayfair , London , England Political party Conservative Other political affiliations Young England ( 1840s )
Spouse Mary Anne Evans ​ ​ ( m. 1839 ; died 1872 ) ​ Parents *
Isaac D' Israeli * Maria Basevi Signature Cursive signature in ink Writing career Notable works List * * Vivian Grey *
Popanilla * The Young Duke * Contarini Fleming * Ixion in Heaven * The Wondrous Tale of Alroy *
The Rise of Iskander *
The Infernal Marriage * Henrietta Temple *
Venetia * Coningsby * Sybil * Tancred *
Lothair * Endymion Benjamin Disraeli , 1st Earl of Beaconsfield ( 21 December 1804 - 19 April 1881 ) was a British statesman , Conservative politician and writer who twice served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom .
He played a central role in the creation of the modern Conservative Party , defining its policies and its broad outreach .
Disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the Liberal Party leader William Ewart Gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " Tory democracy " .
He made the Conservatives the party most identified with the British Empire and military action to expand it , both of which were popular among British voters .
He is the only British prime minister to have been born Jewish .
Disraeli was born in Bloomsbury , at that time a part of Middlesex .
His father left Judaism after a dispute at his synagogue ; Benjamin became an Anglican at the age of 12 .
After several unsuccessful attempts , Disraeli entered the House of Commons in 1837 .
In 1846 , Prime Minister Robert Peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the Corn Laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
Disraeli clashed with Peel in the House of Commons , becoming a major figure in the party .
When Lord Derby , the party leader , thrice formed governments in the 1850s and 1860s , Disraeli served as Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons .
Upon Derby 's retirement in 1868 , Disraeli became prime minister briefly before losing that year 's general election .
He returned to the Opposition before leading the party to a majority in the 1874 general election .
He maintained a close friendship with Queen Victoria who , in 1876 , elevated him to the peerage as Earl of Beaconsfield .
Disraeli 's second term was dominated by the Eastern question — the slow decay of the Ottoman Empire and the desire of other European powers , such as Russia , to gain at its expense .
Disraeli arranged for the British to purchase a major interest in the Suez Canal Company in Egypt .
In 1878 , faced with Russian victories against the Ottomans , he worked at the Congress of Berlin to obtain peace in the Balkans at terms favourable to Britain and unfavourable to Russia , its longstanding enemy .
This diplomatic victory established Disraeli as one of Europe 's leading statesmen .
World events thereafter moved against the Conservatives .
Controversial wars in Afghanistan and South Africa undermined his public support .
He angered farmers by refusing to reinstitute the Corn Laws in response to poor harvests and cheap imported grain .
With Gladstone conducting a massive speaking campaign , the Liberals defeated Disraeli 's Conservatives at the 1880 general election .
In his final months , Disraeli led the Conservatives in Opposition .
Disraeli wrote novels throughout his career , beginning in 1826 , and published his last completed novel , Endymion , shortly before he died at the age of 76 .
Early life Childhood Disraeli was born on 21 December 1804 at 6
King 's Road , Bedford Row , Bloomsbury , London , the second child and eldest son of Isaac D' Israeli , a literary critic and historian , and Maria ( Miriam ) , née Basevi .
The family was mostly from Italy , of Sephardic Jewish mercantile background .
He also had some Ashkenazi Jewish ancestors .
He later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand Portuguese and Venetian descent ; in fact , Isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on Disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including Isaac Cardoso , as well as members of the Goldsmids , the Mocattas and the Montefiores .
Historians differ on Disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : Bernard Glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of England 's ruling elite ;
Sarah Bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " .
Three portraits ; a man and two women Disraeli 's father , mother and sister —
Isaac , Maria and Sarah Disraeli 's siblings were Sarah , Naphtali ( born and died 1807 ) , Ralph and James ( " Jem " ) .
He was close to his sister and on affectionate but more distant terms with his surviving brothers .
Details of his schooling are sketchy .
From the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in Islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
Two years later or so— the exact date has not been ascertained— he was sent as a boarder to Rev John Potticary 's school at Blackheath .
Following a quarrel in 1813 with the Bevis Marks Synagogue , his father renounced Judaism and had the four children baptised into the Church of England in July and August 1817 .
Isaac D'Israeli had never taken religion very seriously but had remained a conforming member of the synagogue .
Isaac 's father , Benjamin , was a prominent and devout member ; it was probably out of respect for him that Isaac did not leave when he fell out with the synagogue authorities in 1813 .
After Benjamin senior died in 1816 , Isaac felt free to leave the congregation following a second dispute .
Isaac 's friend Sharon Turner , a solicitor , convinced him that although he could comfortably remain unattached to any formal religion it would be disadvantageous to the children if they did so .
Turner stood as godfather when Benjamin was baptised , aged twelve , on 31 July 1817 .
Conversion enabled Disraeli to contemplate a career in politics .
There had been Members of Parliament ( MPs ) from Jewish families since Sampson Gideon in 1770 .
However , until the Jews Relief Act 1858 , MPs were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a Christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
It is not known whether Disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to Winchester College , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
His two younger brothers were sent there , and it is not clear why Isaac chose to send his eldest son to a much less prestigious school .
The boy evidently held his mother responsible for the decision ;
Bradford speculates that " Benjamin 's delicate health and his obviously Jewish appearance may have had something to do with it . "
The school chosen for him was run by Eliezer Cogan at Higham Hill in Walthamstow .
He began there in the autumn term of 1817 ; he later recalled his education :
I was at school for two or three years under the Revd .
Dr Cogan , a Greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the A schylus of Bishop Blomfield , & was himself the Editor of the Greek Gnostic poets .
After this I was with a private tutor for two years in my own County , & my education was severely classical .
Too much so ; in the pride of boyish erudition , I edited the Idonisian Eclogue of Theocritus , wh . was privately printed .
This was my first production : puerile pedantry .
1820s
In November 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , Disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— Swain , Stevens , Maples , Pearse and Hunt—in the City of London .
T F Maples was not only the young Disraeli 's employer and a friend of his father , but also his prospective father-in-law : Isaac and Maples considered that the latter 's only daughter might be a suitable match for Benjamin .
A friendship developed , but there was no romance .
The firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer R W Davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
Although biographers including Robert Blake and Bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with Disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
He recalled : I had some scruples , for even then I dreamed of Parliament .
My father 's refrain always was ' Philip Carteret Webb ' , who was the most eminent solicitor of his boyhood and who was an MP .
It would be a mistake to suppose that the two years and more that I was in the office of our friend were wasted .
I have often thought , though I have often regretted the University , that it was much the reverse .
A young man of vaguely Semitic appearance , with long and curly black hair Portrait of Benjamin Disraeli by Francis Grant .
Disraeli as a young man—a retrospective portrayal painted in 1852
The year after joining Maples ' firm , Benjamin changed his surname from D' Israeli to Disraeli .
His reasons are unknown , but the biographer Bernard Glassman surmises that it was to avoid being confused with his father .
Disraeli 's sister and brothers adopted the new version of the name ;
Isaac and his wife retained the older form .
Disraeli toured Belgium and the Rhine Valley with his father in the summer of 1824 .
He later wrote that while travelling on the Rhine he decided to abandon his position :
" I determined when descending those magical waters that I would not be a lawyer . "
On their return to England he left the solicitors , at the suggestion of Maples , with the aim of qualifying as a barrister .
He enrolled as a student at Lincoln 's Inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , Nathaniel Basevy , and then those of Benjamin Austen , who persuaded Isaac that Disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
He had made a tentative start : in May 1824 he submitted a manuscript to his father 's friend , the publisher John Murray , but withdrew it before Murray could decide whether to publish it .
Released from the law , Disraeli did some work for Murray , but turned most of his attention to speculative dealing on the stock exchange .
There was at the time a boom in shares in South American mining companies .
Spain was losing its South American colonies in the face of rebellions .
At the urging of George Canning the British government recognised the new independent governments of Argentina ( 1824 ) , Colombia and Mexico ( both 1825 ) .
With no money of his own , Disraeli borrowed money to invest .
He became involved with the financier J. D . Powles , who was prominent among those encouraging the mining boom .
In 1825 , Disraeli wrote three anonymous pamphlets for Powles , promoting the companies .
The pamphlets were published by John Murray , who invested heavily in the boom .
John Murray and J. G. Lockhart Murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with The Times .
In 1825 Disraeli convinced him that he should proceed .
The new paper , The Representative , promoted the mines and those politicians who supported them , particularly Canning .
Disraeli impressed Murray with his energy and commitment to the project , but he failed in his key task of persuading the eminent writer John Gibson Lockhart to edit the paper .
After that , Disraeli 's influence on Murray waned , and to his resentment he was sidelined in the affairs of The Representative .
The paper survived only six months , partly because the mining bubble burst in late 1825 , and partly because , according to Blake , the paper was " atrociously edited " .
The bursting of the mining bubble was ruinous for Disraeli .
By June 1825 he and his business partners had lost £7,000 .
Disraeli could not pay off the last of his debts from this debacle until 1849 .
He turned to writing , motivated partly by his desperate need for money , and partly by a wish for revenge on Murray and others by whom he felt slighted .
There was a vogue for what was called " silver-fork fiction " — novels depicting aristocratic life , usually by anonymous authors , read by the aspirational middle classes .
Disraeli 's first novel , Vivian Grey , published anonymously in four volumes in 1826-27 , was a thinly veiled re-telling of the affair of The Representative .
It sold well , but caused much offence in influential circles when the authorship was discovered .
Disraeli , then just 23 , did not move in high society , as the numerous solecisms in his book made obvious .
Reviewers were sharply critical on these grounds of both the author and the book .
Murray and Lockhart , men of great influence in literary circles , believed that Disraeli had caricatured them and abused their confidence—an accusation denied by the author but repeated by many of his biographers .
In later editions
Disraeli made many changes , softening his satire , but the damage to his reputation proved long-lasting .
Disraeli 's biographer Jonathan Parry writes that the financial failure and personal criticism that Disraeli suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger for a serious nervous crisis affecting him over the next four years : " He had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . "
He was still living with his parents in London , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , Isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before Disraeli sought wider horizons .
1830-1837 Together with his sister 's fiancé , William Meredith , Disraeli travelled widely in southern Europe and beyond in 1830-31 .
The trip was financed partly by another high society novel , The Young Duke , written in 1829-30 .
The tour was cut short suddenly by Meredith 's death from smallpox in Cairo in July 1831 .
Despite this tragedy , and the need for treatment for a sexually transmitted disease on his return , Disraeli felt enriched by his experiences .
He became , in Parry 's words , " aware of values that seemed denied to his insular countrymen .
The journey encouraged his self-consciousness , his moral relativism , and his interest in Eastern racial and religious attitudes . "
Blake regards the tour as one of the formative experiences of Disraeli 's career : " he impressions that it made on him were life-lasting .
They conditioned his attitude toward some of the most important political problems which faced him in his later years— especially the Eastern Question ; they also coloured many of his novels . "
Disraeli wrote two novels in the aftermath of the tour .
Contarini Fleming ( 1832 ) was avowedly a self-portrait .
It is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and Mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
As Parry observes , the book ends on a political note , setting out Europe 's progress " from feudal to federal principles " .
The Wondrous Tale of Alroy the following year portrayed the problems of a medieval Jew in deciding between a small , exclusively Jewish state and a large empire embracing all .
Two men and two women Friends and allies of Disraeli in the 1830s : clockwise from top left —
Croker , Lyndhurst , Henrietta Sykes and Lady Londonderry
After these novels were published , Disraeli declared that he would " write no more about myself " .
He had already turned his attention to politics in 1832 , during the great crisis over the Reform Bill .
He contributed to an anti-
Whig pamphlet edited by John Wilson Croker and published by Murray entitled England and France : or a cure for Ministerial Gallomania .
The choice of a Tory publication was regarded as strange by Disraeli 's friends and relatives , who thought him more of a Radical .
Indeed , he had objected to Murray about Croker 's inserting " high Tory " sentiment : Disraeli remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of Reform can issue from my pen . "
Moreover , at the time Gallomania was published , Disraeli was electioneering in High Wycombe in the Radical interest .
Disraeli 's politics at the time were influenced both by his rebellious streak and his desire to make his mark .
At that time , British politics were dominated by the aristocracy , with a few powerful commoners .
The Whigs derived from the coalition of Lords who had forced through the Bill of Rights 1689 and in some cases were their descendants .
The Tories tended to support King and Church and sought to thwart political change .
A small number of Radicals , generally from northern constituencies , were the strongest advocates of continuing reform .
In the early 1830s the Tories and the interests they represented appeared to be a lost cause .
The other great party , the Whigs , were anathema to Disraeli : " Toryism is worn out & I cannot condescend to be a Whig . "
There was a by-election and a general election in 1832 ;
Disraeli unsuccessfully stood as a Radical at High Wycombe in each .
Disraeli 's political views embraced certain Radical policies , particularly electoral reform , and also some Tory ones , including protectionism .
He began to move in Tory circles .
In 1834 he was introduced to the former Lord Chancellor , Lord Lyndhurst , by Henrietta Sykes , wife of Sir Francis Sykes .
She was having an affair with Lyndhurst and began another with Disraeli .
Disraeli and Lyndhurst took an immediate liking to each other .
Lyndhurst was an indiscreet gossip with a fondness for intrigue ; this appealed greatly to Disraeli , who became his secretary and go-between .
In 1835 Disraeli stood for the last time as a Radical , again unsuccessfully contesting High Wycombe .
Two men of Victorian appearance Opponents of Disraeli : O' Connell and Labouchere In April 1835 , Disraeli fought a by-election at Taunton as a Tory candidate .
The Irish MP
Daniel O'Connell , misled by inaccurate press reports , thought Disraeli had slandered him while electioneering at Taunton ; he launched an outspoken attack , referring to Disraeli as : a reptile ...
just fit now , after being twice discarded by the people , to become a Conservative .
He possesses all the necessary requisites of perfidy , selfishness , depravity , want of principle , etc. , which would qualify him for the change .
His name shows that he is of Jewish origin .
I do not use it as a term of reproach ; there are many most respectable Jews .
But there are , as in every other people , some of the lowest and most disgusting grade of moral turpitude ; and of those I look upon Mr . Disraeli as the worst .
Disraeli 's public exchanges with O'Connell , extensively reproduced in The Times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old O'Connell 's son ( which resulted in Disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that O'Connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
Disraeli was highly gratified by the dispute , which propelled him to general public notice for the first time .
He did not defeat the incumbent Whig member , Henry Labouchere , but the Taunton constituency was regarded as unwinnable by the Tories .
Disraeli kept Labouchere 's majority down to 170 , a good showing that put him in line for a winnable seat in the near future .
With Lyndhurst 's encouragement Disraeli turned to writing propaganda for his newly adopted party .
His Vindication of the English Constitution , was published in December 1835 .
It was couched in the form of an open letter to Lyndhurst , and in Bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that Disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of Tory policies .
The following year he wrote a series of satires on politicians of the day , which he published in The Times under the pen-name " Runnymede " .
His targets included the Whigs , collectively and individually , Irish nationalists , and political corruption .
One essay ended : The English nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering Papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the Peers .
The House of Lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the Whig oligarchs , their tools the Dissenters , and their masters the Irish priests .
In the mean time , the Whigs bawl that there is a " collision ! "
It is true there is a collision , but it is not a collision between the Lords and the People , but between the Ministers and the Constitution .
Disraeli was elected to the exclusively Tory Carlton Club in 1836 , and was also taken up by the party 's leading hostess , Lady Londonderry .
In June 1837 William IV died , the young Queen Victoria succeeded him , and parliament was dissolved .
On the recommendation of the Carlton Club , Disraeli was adopted as a Tory parliamentary candidate at the ensuing general election .
Parliament Back-bencher
In the election in July 1837 , Disraeli won a seat in the House of Commons as one of two members , both Tory , for the constituency of Maidstone .
The other was Wyndham Lewis , who helped finance Disraeli 's election campaign , and who died the following year .
In the same year Disraeli published a novel , Henrietta Temple , which was a love story and social comedy , drawing on his affair with Henrietta Sykes .
He had broken off the relationship in late 1836 , distraught that she had taken yet another lover .
His other novel of this period is Venetia , a romance based on the characters of Shelley and Byron , written quickly to raise much-needed money .
Disraeli made his maiden speech in Parliament on 7 December 1837 .
He followed O'Connell , whom he sharply criticised for the latter 's " long , rambling , jumbling , speech " .
He was shouted down by O'Connell 's supporters .
After this unpromising start Disraeli kept a low profile for the rest of the parliamentary session .
He was a loyal supporter of the party leader Sir Robert Peel and his policies , with the exception of a personal sympathy for the Chartist movement that most Tories did not share .
A portrait of a young woman with elaborately styled brown hair , tied up with a blue bow Mary Anne Lewis c. 1820-30 In 1839 Disraeli married Mary Anne Lewis , the widow of Wyndham Lewis .
Twelve years Disraeli 's senior , Mary Lewis had a substantial income of £5,000 a year .
His motives were generally assumed to be mercenary , but the couple came to cherish one another , remaining close until she died more than three decades later .
" Dizzy married me for my money " , his wife said later , " But , if he had the chance again , he would marry me for love . "
Finding the financial demands of his Maidstone seat too much , Disraeli secured a Tory nomination for Shrewsbury , winning one of the constituency 's two seats at the 1841 general election , despite serious opposition , and heavy debts which opponents seized on .
The election was a massive defeat for the Whigs across the country , and Peel became prime minister .
Disraeli hoped , unrealistically , for ministerial office .
Though disappointed at being left on the back benches , he continued his support for Peel in 1842 and 1843 , seeking to establish himself as an expert on foreign affairs and international trade .
Although a Tory ( or Conservative , as some in the party now called themselves )
Disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of Chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
After Disraeli won widespread acclaim in March 1842 for worsting Lord Palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new Tory MPs , with whom he formed the Young England group .
They held that the landed interests should use their power to protect the poor from exploitation by middle-class businessmen .
Disraeli hoped to forge a paternalistic Tory-Radical alliance , but he was unsuccessful .
Before the Reform Act 1867 , the working class did not possess the vote and therefore had little political power .
Although Disraeli forged a personal friendship with John Bright , a leading Radical , Disraeli was unable to persuade Bright to sacrifice his distinct position for parliamentary advancement .
When Disraeli attempted to secure a Tory-Radical cabinet in 1852 , Bright refused .
Four men Clockwise from top left :
Bright , Peel , Bentinck and Stanley Disraeli gradually became a sharp critic of Peel 's government , often deliberately taking contrary positions .
The young MP attacked his leader as early as 1843 .
However , the best known of these stances were over the Maynooth Grant in 1845 and the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 .
The President of the Board of Trade , William Gladstone , resigned from the cabinet over the Maynooth Grant .
The Corn Laws imposed a tariff on imported wheat , protecting British farmers from foreign competition , but making the cost of bread artificially high .
Peel hoped that the repeal of the Corn Laws and the resultant influx of cheaper wheat into Britain would relieve the condition of the poor , and in particular the Great Famine caused by successive failure of potato crops in Ireland .
The first months of 1846 were dominated by a battle in Parliament between the free traders and the protectionists over the repeal of the Corn Laws , with the latter rallying around Disraeli and Lord George Bentinck .
An alliance of free-trade Conservatives ( the " Peelites " ) , Radicals , and Whigs carried repeal , and the Conservative Party split : the Peelites moved towards the Whigs , while a " new " Conservative Party formed around the protectionists , led by Disraeli , Bentinck , and Lord Stanley ( later Lord Derby ) .
The split in the Tory party over the repeal of the Corn Laws had profound implications for Disraeli 's political career : almost every
Tory politician with experience of office followed Peel , leaving the rump bereft of leadership .
In Blake 's words , " found himself almost the only figure on his side capable of putting up the oratorical display essential for a parliamentary leader . "
The Duke of Argyll wrote that Disraeli " was like a subaltern in a great battle where every superior officer was killed or wounded " .
If the Tory Party could muster the electoral support necessary to form a government , then Disraeli now seemed to be guaranteed high office , but with a group of men who possessed little or no official experience and who , as a group , remained personally hostile to Disraeli .
In the event the Tory split soon had the party out of office , not regaining power until 1852 .
The Conservatives would not again have a majority in the House of Commons until 1874 .
Bentinck and the leadership Peel successfully steered the repeal of the Corn Laws through Parliament and was then defeated by an alliance of his enemies on the issue of Irish law and order ; he resigned in June 1846 .
The Tories remained split , and the Queen sent for Lord John Russell , the Whig leader .
In the 1847 general election , Disraeli stood , successfully , for the Buckinghamshire constituency .
The new House of Commons had more Conservative than Whig members , but the depth of the Tory schism enabled Russell to continue to govern .
The Conservatives were led by Bentinck in the Commons and Stanley in the Lords .
Four men Clockwise from top left :
Russell , Rothschild , Manners and Granby
In 1847 a small political crisis removed Bentinck from the leadership and highlighted Disraeli 's differences with his own party .
In that year 's general election , Lionel de Rothschild had been returned for the City of London .
As a practising Jew he could not take the oath of allegiance in the prescribed Christian form , and therefore could not take his seat .
Lord John Russell , the Whig leader who had succeeded Peel as prime minister , proposed in the Commons that the oath should be amended to permit Jews to enter Parliament .
Disraeli spoke in favour of the measure , arguing that Christianity was " completed Judaism " , and asking the House of Commons " Where is your Christianity if you do not believe in their Judaism ? " Russell and Disraeli 's future rival Gladstone thought this brave ; the speech was badly received by his own party .
The Tories and the Anglican establishment were hostile to the bill .
With the exception of Disraeli , every member of the future protectionist cabinet then in Parliament voted against the measure .
The measure was voted down .
In the aftermath of the debate Bentinck resigned the leadership and was succeeded by Lord Granby ; Disraeli 's speech , thought by many of his own party to be blasphemous , ruled him out for the time being .
While these intrigues played out , Disraeli was working with the Bentinck family to secure the necessary financing to purchase Hughenden Manor , in Buckinghamshire .
The possession of a country house and incumbency of a county constituency were regarded as essential for a Tory with leadership ambitions .
Disraeli and his wife alternated between Hughenden and several homes in London for the rest of their marriage .
The negotiations were complicated by Bentinck 's sudden death on 21 September 1848 , but Disraeli obtained a loan of £25,000 from Bentinck 's brothers Lord Henry Bentinck and Lord Titchfield .
Within a month of his appointment Granby resigned the leadership in the Commons and the party functioned without a leader in the Commons for the rest of the session .
At the start of the next session , affairs were handled by a triumvirate of Granby , Disraeli , and John Charles Herries— indicative of the tension between Disraeli and the rest of the party , who needed his talents but mistrusted him .
This confused arrangement ended with Granby 's resignation in 1851 ; Disraeli effectively ignored the two men regardless .
Chancellor of the Exchequer First Derby government Main article : Who ?
Who ?
ministry
A stately-looking gentleman in a dark suit , sitting with a book The Earl of Derby , Prime Minister 1852 , 1858-59 , 1866-68 In March 1851 , Lord John Russell 's government was defeated over a bill to equalise the county and borough franchises , mostly because of divisions among his supporters .
He resigned , and the Queen sent for Stanley , who felt that a minority government could do little and would not last long , so Russell remained in office .
Disraeli regretted this , hoping for an opportunity , however brief , to show himself capable in office .
Stanley , in contrast , deprecated his inexperienced followers as a reason for not assuming office :
" These are not names I can put before the Queen . "
At the end of June 1851 , Stanley succeeded to the title of Earl of Derby .
The Whigs were wracked by internal dissensions during the second half of 1851 , much of which Parliament spent in recess .
Russell dismissed Lord Palmerston from the cabinet , leaving the latter determined to deprive the Prime Minister of office .
Palmerston did so within weeks of Parliament 's reassembly on 4 February 1852 , his followers combining with Disraeli 's
Tories to defeat the government on a Militia Bill , and Russell resigned .
Derby had either to take office or risk damage to his reputation , and he accepted the Queen 's commission as prime minister .
Palmerston declined any office ;
Derby had hoped to have him as Chancellor of the Exchequer .
Disraeli , his closest ally , was his second choice and accepted , though disclaiming any great knowledge in the financial field .
Gladstone refused to join the government .
Disraeli may have been attracted to the office by the £5,000 annual salary , which would help pay his debts .
Few of the new cabinet had held office before ; when Derby tried to inform the Duke of Wellington of the names of the ministers , the old Duke , who was somewhat deaf , inadvertently branded the new government by incredulously repeating " Who ?
Who ? "
In the following weeks , Disraeli served as Leader of the House ( with Derby as prime minister in the Lords ) and as Chancellor .
He wrote regular reports on proceedings in the Commons to Victoria , who described them as " very curious " and " much in the style of his books " .
Parliament was prorogued on 1 July 1852 as the Tories could not govern for long as a minority ; Disraeli hoped that they would gain a majority of about 40 .
Instead , the election later that month had no clear winner , and the Derby government held to power pending the meeting of Parliament .
Budget Disraeli 's task as Chancellor was to devise a budget which would satisfy the protectionist elements who supported the Tories , without uniting the free-traders against it .
His proposed budget , which he presented to the Commons on 3 December , lowered the taxes on malt and tea , provisions designed to appeal to the working class .
To make his budget revenue-neutral , as funds were needed to provide defences against the French , he doubled the house tax and continued the income tax .
Disraeli 's overall purpose was to enact policies which would benefit the working classes , making his party more attractive to them .
Although the budget did not contain protectionist features , the Opposition was prepared to destroy it— and Disraeli 's career as Chancellor—in part out of revenge for his actions against Peel in 1846 .
MP
Sidney
Herbert predicted that the budget would fail because " Jews make no converts " .
A middle-aged man in Victorian clothes Gladstone in the 1850s Disraeli delivered the budget on 3 December 1852 , and prepared to wind up the debate for the government on 16 December—it was customary for the Chancellor to have the last word .
A massive defeat for the government was predicted .
Disraeli attacked his opponents individually , and then as a force :
" I face a Coalition ... This , too , I know , that England does not love coalitions . "
His speech of three hours was quickly seen as a parliamentary masterpiece .
As MPs prepared to divide , Gladstone rose to his feet and began an angry speech , despite the efforts of Tory MPs to shout him down .
The interruptions were fewer , as Gladstone gained control of the House , and in the next two hours painted a picture of Disraeli as frivolous and his budget as subversive .
The government was defeated by 19 votes , and Derby resigned four days later .
He was replaced by the Peelite Earl of Aberdeen , with Gladstone as his Chancellor .
Because of Disraeli 's unpopularity among the Peelites , no party reconciliation was possible while he remained Tory leader in the Commons .
Opposition
With the fall of the government , Disraeli and the Conservatives returned to the Opposition benches .
Disraeli would spend three-quarters of his 44-year parliamentary career in Opposition .
Derby was reluctant to seek to unseat the government , fearing a repetition of the Who ?
Who ?
Ministry and knowing that shared dislike of Disraeli was part of what had formed the governing coalition .
Disraeli , on the other hand , was anxious to return to office .
In the interim , Disraeli , as Conservative leader in the Commons , opposed the government on all major measures .
In June 1853 Disraeli was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Oxford .
He had been recommended for it by Lord Derby , the university 's Chancellor .
The start of the Crimean War in 1854 caused a lull in party politics ;
Disraeli spoke patriotically in support .
The British military efforts were marked by bungling , and in 1855 a restive Parliament considered a resolution to establish a committee on the conduct of the war .
The Aberdeen government made this a motion of confidence ;
Disraeli led the Opposition to defeat the government , 305 to 148 .
Aberdeen resigned , and the Queen sent for Derby , who to Disraeli 's frustration refused to take office .
Palmerston was deemed essential to any Whig ministry , and he would not join any he did not head .
The Queen reluctantly asked Palmerston to form a government .
Under Palmerston , the war went better , and was ended by the Treaty of Paris in early 1856 .
Disraeli was early to call for peace but had little influence on events .
When a rebellion broke out in India in 1857 , Disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the British East India Company .
After peace was restored , and Palmerston in early 1858 brought in legislation for direct rule of India by the Crown , Disraeli opposed it .
Many Conservative MPs refused to follow him , and the bill passed the Commons easily .
Palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the Orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the French Emperor Napoleon III by an Italian revolutionary with a bomb made in Birmingham .
At the request of the French ambassador , Palmerston proposed amending the conspiracy to murder statute to make creating an infernal device a felony .
He was defeated by 19 votes on the second reading , with many Liberals crossing the aisle against him .
He immediately resigned , and Lord Derby returned to office .
Second Derby government Main article : Second Derby-Disraeli ministry Derby took office at the head of a purely " Conservative " administration , not in coalition .
He again offered a place to Gladstone , who declined .
Disraeli was once more leader of the House of Commons and returned to the Exchequer .
As in 1852 , Derby led a minority government , dependent on the division of its opponents for survival .
As Leader of the House , Disraeli resumed his regular reports to Queen Victoria , who had requested that he include what she " could not meet in newspapers " .
During its brief life of just over a year , the Derby government proved moderately progressive .
The Government of India Act 1858 ended the role of the East India Company in governing the subcontinent .
The Thames Purification Bill funded the construction of much larger sewers for London .
Disraeli had supported efforts to allow Jews to sit in Parliament with a bill passed through the Commons allowing each house of Parliament to determine what oaths its members should take .
This was grudgingly agreed to by the House of Lords , with a minority of Conservatives joining with the Opposition to pass it .
In 1858 , Baron Lionel de Rothschild became the first MP to profess the Jewish faith .
Faced with a vacancy , Disraeli and Derby tried yet again to bring Gladstone , still nominally a Conservative MP , into the government , hoping to strengthen it .
Disraeli wrote a personal letter to Gladstone , asking him to place the good of the party above personal animosity : " Every man performs his office , and there is a Power , greater than ourselves , that disposes of all this . "
In response , Gladstone denied that personal feelings played any role in his decisions then and previously whether to accept office , while acknowledging that there were differences between him and Derby " broader than you may have supposed " .
The Tories pursued a Reform Bill in 1859 , which would have resulted in a modest increase to the franchise .
The Liberals were healing the breaches between those who favoured Russell and the Palmerston loyalists , and in late March 1859 , the government was defeated on a Russell-sponsored amendment .
Derby dissolved Parliament , and the ensuing general election resulted in modest Tory gains , but not enough to control the Commons .
When Parliament assembled , Derby 's government was defeated by 13 votes on an amendment to the Address from the Throne .
He resigned , and the Queen reluctantly sent for Palmerston again .
Opposition and third term as Chancellor Main article : Third Derby-Disraeli ministry After Derby 's second ejection from office , Disraeli faced dissension within Conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to Derby— the former prime minister warned Disraeli of some MPs seeking his removal from the front bench .
Among the conspirators were Lord Robert Cecil , a Conservative MP who would a quarter century later become prime minister as Lord Salisbury ; he wrote that having Disraeli as leader in the Commons decreased the Conservatives ' chance of holding office .
When Cecil 's father objected , Lord Robert stated , " I have merely put into print what all the country gentlemen were saying in private . "
A young man with dark hair and huge sideburns Lord Robert Cecil , Disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor Disraeli led a toothless Opposition in the Commons—seeing no way of unseating Palmerston , Derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
Disraeli kept himself informed on foreign affairs , and on what was going on in cabinet , thanks to a source within it .
When the American Civil War began in 1861 , Disraeli said little publicly , but like most Englishmen expected the South to win .
Less reticent were Palmerston , Gladstone , and Russell , whose statements in support of the South contributed to years of hard feelings in the United States .
In 1862 , Disraeli met Prussian Count Otto von Bismarck and said of him , " be careful about that man , he means what he says " .
The party truce ended in 1864 , with Tories outraged over Palmerston 's handling of the territorial dispute between the German Confederation and Denmark known as the Schleswig-Holstein Question .
Disraeli had little help from Derby , who was ill , but he united the party enough on a no-confidence vote to limit the government to a majority of 18— Tory defections and absentees kept Palmerston in office .
Despite rumours about Palmerston 's health as he turned 80 , he remained personally popular , and the Liberals increased their margin in the July 1865 general election .
In the wake of the poor election results , Derby predicted to Disraeli that neither of them would ever hold office again .
Political plans were thrown into disarray by Palmerston 's death on 18 October 1865 .
Russell became prime minister again , with Gladstone clearly the Liberal Party 's leader-in-waiting , and as Leader of the House Disraeli 's direct opponent .
One of Russell 's early priorities was a Reform Bill , but the proposed legislation that Gladstone announced on 12 March 1866 divided his party .
The Conservatives and the dissident Liberals repeatedly attacked Gladstone 's bill , and in June finally defeated the government ;
Russell resigned on 26 June .
The dissidents were unwilling to serve under Disraeli in the House of Commons , and Derby formed a third Conservative minority government , with Disraeli again as Chancellor .
Tory Democrat : the 1867 Reform Act It was Disraeli 's belief that if given the vote British people would use it instinctively to put their natural and traditional rulers , the gentlemen of the Conservative Party , into power .
Responding to renewed agitation for popular suffrage , Disraeli persuaded a majority of the cabinet to agree to a Reform bill .
With what Derby cautioned was " a leap in the dark " , Disraeli had outflanked the Liberals who , as the supposed champions of Reform , dared not oppose him .
In the absence of a credible party rival and for fear of having an election called on the issue , Conservatives felt obliged to support Disraeli despite their misgivings .
There were Tory dissenters , most notably Lord Cranborne ( as Robert Cecil was by then known ) who resigned from the government and spoke against the bill , accusing Disraeli of " a political betrayal which has no parallel in our Parliamentary annals " .
Even as Disraeli accepted Liberal amendments ( although pointedly refusing those moved by Gladstone ) that further lowered the property qualification , Cranborne was unable to lead an effective rebellion .
Disraeli gained wide acclaim and became a hero to his party for the " marvellous parliamentary skill " with which he secured the passage of Reform in the Commons .
From the Liberal benches too there was admiration .
MP for Nottingham Bernal Ostborne declared : I have always thought the Chancellor of Exchequer was the greatest Radical in the House .
He has achieved what no other man in the country could have done .
He has lugged up that great omnibus full of stupid , heavy , country gentlemen--I only say ' stupid ' in the parliamentary sense--and has converted these Conservative into Radical Reformers .
The Reform Act 1867 passed that August .
It extended the franchise by 938,427 men—an increase of 88% —by giving the vote to male householders and male lodgers paying at least £10 for rooms .
It eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as Liverpool and Manchester .
Prime Minister ( 1868 )
First term Main articles :
First premiership of Benjamin Disraeli and First Disraeli ministry
Derby had long had attacks of gout which left him bedbound , unable to deal with politics .
As the new session of Parliament approached in February 1868 , he was unable to leave his home but was reluctant to resign , as at 68 he was much younger than either Palmerston or Russell at the end of their premierships .
Derby knew that his " attacks of illness would , at no distant period , incapacitate me from the discharge of my public duties " ; doctors had warned him that his health required his resignation .
In late February , with Parliament in session and Derby absent , he wrote to Disraeli asking for confirmation that " you will not shrink from the additional heavy responsibility " .
Reassured , he wrote to the Queen , resigning and recommending Disraeli as " only he could command the cordial support , en masse , of his present colleagues " .
Disraeli went to Osborne House on the Isle of Wight , where the Queen asked him to form a government .
The monarch wrote to her daughter , Prussian Crown Princess Victoria , " Mr . Disraeli is Prime Minister !
A proud thing for a man 'risen from the people ' to have obtained ! "
The new prime minister told those who came to congratulate him , " I have climbed to the top of the greasy pole . "
First government , February-December 1868 Four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes Clockwise from top left : Chelmsford , Cairns , Hunt and Manning The Conservatives remained a minority in the House of Commons and the passage of the Reform Bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
Disraeli 's term as prime minister , which began in February 1868 , would therefore be short unless the Conservatives won the general election .
He made only two major changes in the cabinet : he replaced Lord Chelmsford as Lord Chancellor with Lord Cairns and brought in George Ward Hunt as Chancellor of the Exchequer .
Derby had intended to replace Chelmsford once a vacancy in a suitable sinecure developed .
Disraeli was unwilling to wait , and Cairns , in his view , was a far stronger minister .
Disraeli 's first premiership was dominated by the heated debate over the Church of Ireland .
Although Ireland was largely Roman Catholic , the Church of England represented most landowners .
It remained the established church and was funded by direct taxation , which was greatly resented by the Catholics and Presbyterians .
An initial attempt by Disraeli to negotiate with Archbishop Manning the establishment of a Catholic university in Dublin foundered in March when Gladstone moved resolutions to disestablish the Irish Church altogether .
The proposal united the Liberals under Gladstone 's leadership , while causing divisions among the Conservatives .
The Conservatives remained in office because the new electoral register was not yet ready ; neither party wished a poll under the old roll .
Gladstone began using the Liberal majority in the Commons to push through resolutions and legislation .
Disraeli 's government survived until the December general election , at which the Liberals were returned to power with a majority .
In its short life , the first Disraeli government passed noncontroversial laws .
It ended public executions , and the Corrupt Practices
Act did much to end electoral bribery .
It authorised an early version of nationalisation , having the Post Office buy up the telegraph companies .
Amendments to the school law , the Scottish legal system , and the railway laws were passed .
In addition , the Public Health ( Scotland )
Act instituted sanitary inspectors and medical officers .
According to one study , " better sanitation was enforced throughout Scotland . "
Disraeli sent the successful expedition against Tewodros
II of Ethiopia under Sir Robert Napier .
Opposition leader ; 1874 election
Disraeli circa 1870 Given Gladstone 's majority in the Commons , Disraeli could do little but protest as the government advanced legislation ; he chose to await Liberal mistakes .
He used this leisure time to write a new novel , Lothair ( 1870 ) .
A work of fiction by a former prime minister was a novelty for Britain , and the book became a bestseller .
By 1872 there was dissent in the Conservative ranks over the failure to challenge Gladstone .
This was quieted as Disraeli took steps to assert his leadership , and as divisions among the Liberals became clear .
Public support for Disraeli was shown by cheering at a thanksgiving service in 1872 on the recovery of the Prince of Wales from illness , while Gladstone was met with silence .
Disraeli had supported the efforts of party manager John Eldon Gorst to put the administration of the Conservative Party on a modern basis .
On Gorst 's advice , Disraeli gave a speech to a mass meeting in Manchester that year .
To roaring approval , he compared the Liberal front bench to " a range of exhausted volcanoes...
But the situation is still dangerous .
There are occasional earthquakes and ever and again the dark rumbling of the sea . "
Gladstone , Disraeli stated , dominated the scene and " alternated between a menace and a sigh " .
At his first departure from 10 Downing Street in 1868 , Disraeli had Victoria make his wife Mary Anne Viscountess
Beaconsfield in her own right in lieu of a peerage for himself .
Through 1872 the eighty-year-old peeress had stomach cancer .
She died on 15 December .
Urged by a clergyman to turn her thoughts to Jesus Christ in her final days , she said she could not : " You know Dizzy is my J.C. " In 1873 , Gladstone brought forward legislation to establish a Catholic university in Dublin .
This divided the Liberals , and on 12 March an alliance of Conservatives and Irish Catholics defeated the government by three votes .
Gladstone resigned , and the Queen sent for Disraeli , who refused to take office .
Without a general election , a Conservative government would be another minority ; Disraeli wanted the power a majority would bring and felt he could gain it later by leaving the Liberals in office now .
Gladstone 's government struggled on , beset by scandal and unimproved by a reshuffle .
As part of that change , Gladstone took on the office of Chancellor , leading to questions as to whether he had to stand for re-election on taking on a second ministry— until the 1920s , MPs becoming ministers had to seek re-election .
In January 1874 , Gladstone called a general election , convinced that if he waited longer , he would do worse at the polls .
Balloting was spread over two weeks , beginning on 1 February .
As the constituencies voted , it became clear that the result would be a Conservative majority , the first since 1841 .
In Scotland , where the Conservatives were perennially weak , they increased from seven seats to nineteen .
Overall , they won 350 seats to 245 for the Liberals and 57 for the Irish Home Rule League .
Disraeli became prime minister for the second time .
Prime Minister ( 1874-1880 )
Second term Main articles : Second premiership of Benjamin Disraeli and Second Disraeli ministry
Two gentlemen , the second bearded Derby ( top ) and Northcote Disraeli 's cabinet of twelve , with six peers and six commoners , was the smallest since Reform .
Of the peers , five of them had been in Disraeli 's 1868 cabinet ; the sixth , Lord Salisbury , was reconciled to Disraeli after negotiation and became Secretary of State for India .
Lord Stanley ( who had succeeded his father , the former prime minister , as Earl of Derby ) became Foreign Secretary and Sir Stafford Northcote the Chancellor .
In August 1876 , Disraeli was elevated to the House of Lords as Earl of Beaconsfield and Viscount Hughenden .
The Queen had offered to ennoble him as early as 1868 ; he had then declined .
She did so again in 1874 , when he fell ill at Balmoral , but he was reluctant to leave the Commons for a house in which he had no experience .
Continued ill health during his second premiership caused him to contemplate resignation , but his lieutenant , Derby , was unwilling , feeling that he could not manage the Queen .
For Disraeli , the Lords , where the debate was less intense , was the alternative to resignation .
Five days before the end of the 1876 session of Parliament , on 11 August , Disraeli was seen to linger and look around the chamber before departing .
Newspapers reported his ennoblement the following morning .
In addition to the viscounty bestowed on Mary Anne Disraeli , the earldom of Beaconsfield was to have been bestowed on Edmund Burke in 1797 , but he had died before receiving it .
The name Beaconsfield , a town near Hughenden , was given to a minor character in Vivian Grey .
Disraeli made various statements about his elevation , writing to Selina , Lady Bradford on 8 August 1876 , " I am quite tired of that place " but when asked by a friend how he liked the Lords , replied , " I am dead ; dead but in the Elysian fields . "
Domestic policy Legislation
Under the stewardship of Richard Assheton Cross , the Home Secretary , Disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the Artisans ' and Labourers ' Dwellings Improvement Act 1875 ( 38 & 39 Vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
Also enacted were the Public Health Act 1875 ( 38 & 39 Vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the Sale of Food and Drugs Act 1875 ( 38 & 39 Vict . c. 63 ) , and the Elementary Education Act 1876 ( 39 & 40 Vict . c. 70 ) .
Disraeli 's government introduced a new Factory Act meant to protect workers , the Conspiracy , and Protection of Property Act 1875 ( 38 & 39 Vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the Employers and Workmen Act 1875 ( 38 & 39 Vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
The Sale of Food and Drugs Act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
The Employers and Workmen Act 1875 , according to one study , " finally placed employers and employed on an equal footing before the law " .
The Conspiracy , and Protection of Property
Act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
As a result of these social reforms the Liberal-Labour MP Alexander Macdonald told his constituents in 1879 , " The Conservative party have done more for the working classes in five years than the Liberals have in fifty . "
Civil Service Disraeli 's failure to appoint Samuel Wilberforce as Bishop of London may have cost him votes in the 1868 election .
Gladstone in 1870 had sponsored an Order in Council , introducing competitive examination into the Civil Service , diminishing the political aspects of government hiring .
Disraeli did not agree , and while he did not seek to reverse the order , his actions often frustrated its intent .
For example , Disraeli made political appointments to positions previously given to career civil servants .
He was backed by his party , hungry for office and its emoluments after almost thirty years with only brief spells in government .
Disraeli gave positions to hard-up Conservative leaders , even—to Gladstone 's outrage— creating one office at £2,000 per year .
Nevertheless , Disraeli made fewer peers ( only 22 , including one of Victoria 's sons ) than had Gladstone ( 37 during his just over five years in office ) .
As he had in government posts , Disraeli rewarded old friends with clerical positions , making Sydney Turner , son of a good friend of Isaac D' Israeli , Dean of Ripon .
He favoured Low church clergymen in promotion , disliking other movements in Anglicanism for political reasons .
In this , he came into disagreement with the Queen , who out of loyalty to her late husband Albert preferred Broad church teachings .
One controversial appointment had occurred shortly before the 1868 election .
When the position of Archbishop of Canterbury fell vacant , Disraeli reluctantly agreed to the Queen 's preferred candidate , Archibald Tait , the Bishop of London .
To fill Tait 's vacant see , Disraeli was urged by many people to appoint Samuel Wilberforce , the former Bishop of Winchester .
Disraeli disliked Wilberforce and instead appointed John Jackson , the Bishop of Lincoln .
Blake suggested that , on balance , these appointments cost Disraeli more votes than they gained him .
Foreign policy Disraeli always considered foreign affairs to be the most critical and interesting part of statesmanship .
Nevertheless , his biographer Robert Blake doubts that his subject had specific ideas about foreign policy when he took office in 1874 .
He had rarely travelled abroad ; since his youthful tour of the Middle East in 1830-1831 , he had left Britain only for his honeymoon and three visits to Paris , the last of which was in 1856 .
As he had criticised Gladstone for a do-nothing foreign policy , he most probably contemplated what actions would reassert Britain 's place in Europe .
His brief first premiership , and the first year of his second , gave him little opportunity to make his mark in foreign affairs .
Suez Portrait of Disraeli published in 1873 Refer to caption New Crowns for Old depicts Disraeli as Abanazar from the pantomime Aladdin , offering Victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one .
Disraeli cultivated a public image of himself as an Imperialist with grand gestures such as conferring on Queen Victoria the title " Empress of India " .
The Suez Canal , opened in 1869 , cut weeks and thousands of miles off the sea journey between Britain and India ; in 1875 , approximately 80 % of the ships using the canal were British .
In the event of another rebellion in India or a Russian invasion , the time saved at Suez might be crucial .
Built by French interests , 56 % of the stocks in the canal remained in their hands , while 44 % of the stock belonged to Isma 'il Pasha , the Khedive of Egypt .
He was notorious for his profligate spending .
The canal was losing money , and an attempt by Ferdinand de Lesseps , builder of the canal , to raise the tolls had fallen through when the Khedive had threatened military force to prevent it , and had also attracted Disraeli 's attention .
The Khedive governed Egypt under the Ottoman Empire ; as in the Crimea , the issue of the Canal raised the Eastern Question of what to do about the decaying empire governed from Constantinople .
With much of the pre-canal trade and communications between Britain and India passing through the Ottoman Empire , Britain had done its best to prop up the Ottomans against the threat that Russia would take Constantinople , cutting those communications , and giving Russian ships unfettered access to the Mediterranean .
The French might also threaten those lines .
Britain had had the opportunity to purchase shares in the canal but had declined to do so .
Disraeli sent the Liberal MP Nathan Rothschild to Paris to enquire about buying de Lesseps 's shares .
On 14 November 1875 , the editor of the Pall Mall Gazette , Frederick Greenwood , learned from London banker Henry Oppenheim that the Khedive was seeking to sell his shares in the Suez Canal Company to a French firm .
Greenwood quickly told Lord Derby , the Foreign Secretary , who notified Disraeli .
The Prime Minister moved immediately to secure the shares .
On 23 November , the Khedive offered to sell the shares for 100,000,000 francs .
Rather than seek the aid of the Bank of England , Disraeli borrowed funds from Lionel de Rothschild , who took a commission on the deal .
The banker 's capital was at risk as Parliament could have refused to ratify the transaction .
The contract for purchase was signed at Cairo on 25 November and the shares deposited at the British consulate the following day .
Disraeli told the Queen , " it is settled ; you have it , madam ! "
The public saw the venture as a daring statement of British dominance of the seas .
Sir Ian Malcolm described the Suez Canal share purchase as " the greatest romance of Mr . Disraeli 's romantic career " .
In the following decades , the security of the Suez Canal became a major concern of British foreign policy .
Under Gladstone , Britain took control of Egypt in 1882 .
A later Foreign Secretary , Lord Curzon , described the canal in 1909 as " the determining influence of every considerable movement of British power to the east and south of the Mediterranean " .
Royal Titles Act Main article : Royal Titles
Act 1876
Although initially curious about Disraeli when he entered Parliament in 1837 , Victoria came to detest him over his treatment of Peel .
Over time , her dislike softened , especially as Disraeli took pains to cultivate her .
He told Matthew Arnold , " Everybody likes flattery ; and , when you come to royalty , you should lay it on with a trowel " .
Disraeli 's biographer , Adam Kirsch , suggests that Disraeli 's obsequious treatment of his queen was part flattery , part belief that this was how a queen should be addressed by a loyal subject , and part awe that a middle-class man of Jewish birth should be the companion of a monarch .
By the time of his second premiership , Disraeli had built a strong relationship with Victoria , probably closer to her than any of her prime ministers except her first , Lord Melbourne .
When Disraeli returned as prime minister in 1874 and went to kiss hands , he did so literally , on one knee ; according to Richard Aldous in his book on the rivalry between Disraeli and Gladstone , " Victoria and Disraeli would exploit their closeness for mutual advantage . "
Victoria had long wished to have an imperial title , reflecting Britain 's expanding domain .
She was irked when Tsar Alexander II held a higher rank than her as an emperor , and was appalled that her daughter , the Prussian Crown Princess , would outrank her when her husband came to the throne .
She also saw an imperial title as proclaiming Britain 's increased stature in the world .
The title " Empress of India " had been used informally for some time and she wished to have that title formally bestowed on her .
The Queen prevailed upon Disraeli to introduce a Royal Titles Bill , and also told of her intent to open Parliament in person , which during this time she did only when she wanted something from legislators .
Disraeli was cautious in response , as careful soundings of MPs brought a negative reaction , and he declined to place such a proposal in the Queen 's Speech .
Once the desired bill was finally prepared , Disraeli 's handling of it was not adept .
He neglected to notify either the Prince of Wales or the Opposition and was met by irritation from the prince and a full-scale attack from the Liberals .
An old enemy of Disraeli , former Liberal Chancellor Robert Lowe , alleged during the debate in the Commons that two previous prime ministers had refused to introduce such legislation for the Queen .
Gladstone immediately stated that he was not one of them , and the Queen gave Disraeli leave to quote her saying she had never approached a prime minister with such a proposal .
According to Blake , Disraeli " in a brilliant oration of withering invective proceeded to destroy Lowe " , who apologised and never held office again .
Disraeli said of Lowe that he was the only person in London with whom he would not shake hands : " he is in the mud and there I leave him . "
Fearful of losing , Disraeli was reluctant to bring the bill to a vote in the Commons , but when he did it passed with a majority of 75 .
Once the bill was formally enacted , Victoria began signing her letters " Victoria R & I " ( Latin : Regina et Imperatrix , Queen and Empress ) .
According to Aldous , the bill " shattered Disraeli 's authority in the House of Commons " .
Balkans and Bulgaria Cavalry wielding sabres fight men with guns on foot Fight in
Bulgaria during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78
In July 1875 Serb populations in Bosnia and Herzegovina , then provinces of the Ottoman Empire , revolted against the Turks , alleging religious persecution and poor administration .
The following January , Sultan Abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by Hungarian statesman Julius Andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in Serbia and Bulgaria .
The Turks suppressed the Bulgarian uprising harshly , and when reports of these actions escaped , Disraeli and Derby stated in Parliament that they did not believe them .
Disraeli called them " coffee-house babble " and dismissed allegations of torture by the Ottomans since " Oriental people usually terminate their connections with culprits in a more expeditious fashion " .
Gladstone , who had left the Liberal leadership and retired from public life , was appalled by reports of atrocities in Bulgaria , and in August 1876 , penned a hastily written pamphlet arguing that the Turks should be deprived of Bulgaria because of what they had done there .
He sent a copy to Disraeli , who called it " vindictive and ill-written ... of all the Bulgarian horrors perhaps the greatest " .
Gladstone 's pamphlet became an immense best-seller and rallied the Liberals to urge that the Ottoman Empire should no longer be a British ally .
Disraeli wrote to Lord Salisbury on 3 September , " Had it not been for these unhappy ' atrocities ' , we should have settled a peace very honourable to England and satisfactory to Europe .
Now we are obliged to work from a new point of departure , and dictate to Turkey , who has forfeited all sympathy . "
In spite of this , Disraeli 's policy favoured Constantinople and Ottoman territorial integrity .
Four men International delegates at the Constantinople Conference : clockwise from top left , Saffet Pasha ( Turkey ) , General Ignatieff ( Russia ) , Lord Salisbury ( Britain ) and the Comte de Chaudordy ( France )
Disraeli and the cabinet sent Salisbury as lead British representative to the Constantinople Conference , which met in December 1876 and January 1877 .
In advance of the conference , Disraeli sent Salisbury private word to seek British military occupation of Bulgaria and Bosnia , and British control of the Ottoman Army .
Salisbury ignored these instructions , which his biographer , Andrew Roberts deemed " ludicrous " .
The conference failed to reach agreement with the Turks .
Parliament opened in February 1877 , with Disraeli now in the Lords as Earl of Beaconsfield .
He spoke only once there in the 1877 session on the Eastern Question , stating on 20 February that there was a need for stability in the Balkans , and that forcing Turkey into territorial concessions would not secure it .
The Prime Minister wanted a deal with the Ottomans whereby Britain would temporarily occupy strategic areas to deter the Russians from war , to be returned on the signing of a peace treaty , but found little support in his cabinet , which favoured partition of the Ottoman Empire .
As Disraeli , by then in poor health , continued to battle within the cabinet , Russia invaded Turkey on 21 April , beginning the Russo-Turkish War .
Congress of Berlin Main article : Congress of Berlin The Russians pushed through Ottoman territory and by December 1877 had captured the strategic Bulgarian town of Plevna .
The war divided the British , but the Russian success caused some to forget the atrocities and call for intervention on the Turkish side .
Others hoped for further Russian successes .
The fall of Plevna was a major story for weeks , and Disraeli 's warnings that Russia was a threat to British interests in the eastern Mediterranean were deemed prophetic .
The jingoistic attitude of many Britons increased Disraeli 's political support , and the Queen showed her favour by visiting him at Hughenden — the first time she had visited the country home of her prime minister since the Melbourne ministry .
At the end of January 1878 , the Ottoman Sultan appealed to Britain to save Constantinople .
Amid war fever in Britain , the government asked Parliament to vote £6,000,000 to prepare the Army and Navy for war .
Gladstone opposed the measure , but less than half his party voted with him .
Popular opinion was with Disraeli , though some thought him too soft for not immediately declaring war on Russia .
A map .
See description
Bulgaria as constituted under the San Stefano treaty and as divided at Berlin With the Russians close to Constantinople , the Turks yielded and in March 1878 , signed the Treaty of San Stefano , conceding a Bulgarian state covering a large part of the Balkans .
It would be initially Russian-occupied and many feared that it would give them a client state close to Constantinople .
Other Ottoman possessions in Europe would become independent ; additional territory was to be ceded directly to Russia .
This was unacceptable to the British , who protested , hoping to get the Russians to agree to attend an international conference which German Chancellor Bismarck proposed to hold at Berlin .
The cabinet discussed Disraeli 's proposal to position Indian troops at Malta for possible transit to the Balkans and call out reserves .
Derby resigned in protest , and Disraeli appointed Salisbury as Foreign Secretary .
Amid British preparations for war , the Russians and Turks agreed to discussions at Berlin .
In advance of the meeting , confidential negotiations took place between Britain and Russia in April and May 1878 .
The Russians were willing to make changes to the big Bulgaria , but were determined to retain their new possessions , Bessarabia in Europe and Batum and Kars on the east coast of the Black Sea .
To counterbalance this , Britain required a possession in the Eastern Mediterranean where it might base ships and troops and negotiated with the Ottomans for the cession of Cyprus .
Once this was secretly agreed , Disraeli was prepared to allow Russia 's territorial gains .
Refer to caption Disraeli ( right ) and Salisbury as Knights of the Garter , portrayed by John Tenniel in The Pas de deux ( From the Scène de Triomphe in the Grand Anglo-Turkish Ballet d'Action )
The Congress of Berlin was held in June and July 1878 , the central relationship in it that between Disraeli and Bismarck .
In later years , the German chancellor would show visitors to his office three pictures on the wall : " the portrait of my Sovereign , there on the right that of my wife , and on the left , there , that of Lord Beaconsfield " .
Disraeli caused an uproar in the congress by making his opening address in English , rather than in French , hitherto accepted as the international language of diplomacy .
By one account , the British ambassador in Berlin , Lord Odo Russell , hoping to spare the delegates Disraeli 's very poor French accent , told Disraeli that the congress was hoping to hear a speech in English by one of its masters .
Disraeli left much of the detailed work to Salisbury , concentrating his efforts on making it as difficult as possible for the broken-up big Bulgaria to reunite .
Disraeli intended that Batum be demilitarised , but the Russians obtained their preferred language , and in 1886 , fortified the town .
Nevertheless , the Cyprus Convention ceding the island to Britain was announced during the congress , and again made Disraeli a sensation .
Disraeli gained agreement that Turkey should retain enough of its European possessions to safeguard the Dardanelles .
By one account , when met with Russian intransigence , Disraeli told his secretary to order a special train to return them home to begin the war .
Czar Alexander II later described the congress as " a European coalition against Russia , under Bismarck " .
The Treaty of Berlin was signed on 13 July 1878 at the Radziwill Palace in Berlin .
Disraeli and Salisbury returned home to heroes ' receptions .
At the door of 10 Downing Street , Disraeli received flowers sent by the Queen .
There , he told the gathered crowd , " Lord Salisbury and I have brought you back peace— but a peace I hope with honour . "
The Queen offered him a dukedom , which he declined , though accepting the Garter , as long as Salisbury also received it .
In Berlin , word spread of Bismarck 's admiring description of Disraeli , " Der alte Jude , das ist der Mann !
" In the weeks after Berlin , Disraeli and the cabinet considered calling a general election to capitalise on the public applause he and Salisbury had received .
Parliaments were then for a seven-year term , and it was the custom not to go to the country until the sixth year unless forced to by events .
Only four and a half years had passed and they did not see any clouds on the horizon that might forecast Conservative defeat if they waited .
This decision not to seek re-election has often been cited as a great mistake by Disraeli .
Blake , however , pointed out that results in local elections had been moving against the Conservatives , and doubted if Disraeli missed any great opportunity by waiting .
Afghanistan to Zululand Main articles : Second Anglo-Afghan War and Anglo-Zulu War
A depiction of the Battle of Kandahar , fought in 1880 .
Britain 's victory in the Second Anglo-Afghan War proved a boost to Disraeli 's government .
As successful invasions of India generally came through Afghanistan , the British had observed and sometimes intervened there since the 1830s , hoping to keep the Russians out .
In 1878 the Russians sent a mission to Kabul ; it was not rejected by the Afghans , as the British had hoped .
The British proposed to send their own mission , insisting that the Russians be sent away .
The Viceroy of India Lord Lytton concealed his plans to issue this ultimatum from Disraeli , and when the Prime Minister insisted he take no action , went ahead anyway .
When the Afghans made no answer , Lord Cranbrook as Secretary of State for War , ordered the advance against them in the Second Anglo-Afghan War .
Under Lord Roberts , the British easily defeated them and installed a new ruler , leaving a mission and garrison in Kabul .
British policy in South Africa was to encourage federation between the British-run Cape Colony and Natal , and the Boer republics , the Transvaal ( annexed by Britain in 1877 ) and the Orange Free State .
The governor of Cape Colony , Sir Bartle Frere , believing that the federation could not be accomplished until the native tribes acknowledged British rule , made demands on the Zulu and their king , Cetewayo , which they were certain to reject .
As Zulu troops could not marry until they had washed their spears in blood , they were eager for combat .
Frere did not send word to the cabinet of what he had done until the ultimatum was about to expire .
Disraeli and the cabinet reluctantly backed him , and in early January 1879 resolved to send reinforcements .
Before they could arrive , on 22 January , a Zulu impi ( army ) , moving with great speed and endurance , destroyed a British encampment in South Africa in the Battle of Isandlwana .
Over a thousand British and colonial troops were killed .
Word of the defeat did not reach London until 12 February .
Disraeli wrote the next day , " the terrible disaster has shaken me to the centre " .
He reprimanded Frere , but left him in charge , attracting fire from all sides .
Disraeli sent General Sir Garnet Wolseley as High Commissioner and Commander in Chief , and Cetewayo and the Zulus were crushed at the Battle of Ulundi on 4 July 1879 .
On 8 September 1879 Sir Louis Cavagnari , in charge of the mission in Kabul , was killed with his entire staff by rebelling Afghan soldiers .
Roberts undertook a successful punitive expedition against the Afghans over the next six weeks. 1880 election
Main article : 1880 United Kingdom general election
In December 1878 , Gladstone was offered the Liberal nomination for Edinburghshire , a constituency popularly known as Midlothian .
The small Scottish electorate was dominated by two noblemen , the Conservative Duke of Buccleuch and the Liberal Earl of Rosebery .
The Earl , a friend of both Disraeli and Gladstone who would succeed the latter after his final term as prime minister , had journeyed to the United States to view politics there , and was convinced that aspects of American electioneering techniques could be translated to Britain .
On his advice , Gladstone accepted the offer in January 1879 , and later that year began his Midlothian campaign , speaking not only in Edinburgh , but across Britain , attacking Disraeli , to huge crowds .
Conservative chances of re-election were damaged by the poor weather , and consequent effects on agriculture .
Four consecutive wet summers through 1879 had led to poor harvests .
In the past , the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times , but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the United States , grain prices remained low .
Other European nations , faced with similar circumstances , opted for protection , and Disraeli was urged to reinstitute the Corn Laws .
He declined , stating that he regarded the matter as settled .
Protection would have been highly unpopular among the newly enfranchised urban working classes , as it would raise their cost of living .
Amid an economic slump generally , the Conservatives lost support among farmers .
Disraeli 's health continued to fail through 1879 .
Owing to his infirmities , Disraeli was 45 minutes late for the Lord Mayor 's Dinner at the Guild hall in November , at which it is customary that the Prime Minister speaks .
Though many commented on how healthy he looked , it took him great effort to appear so , and when he told the audience he expected to speak to the dinner again the following year , attendees chuckled .
Gladstone was then in the midst of his campaign .
Despite his public confidence , Disraeli recognised that the Conservatives would probably lose the next election and was already contemplating his Resignation Honours .
Despite this pessimism , Conservatives hopes were buoyed in early 1880 with successes in by-elections the Liberals had expected to win , concluding with victory in Southwark , normally a Liberal stronghold .
The cabinet had resolved to wait before dissolving Parliament ; in early March they reconsidered , agreeing to go to the country as soon as possible .
Parliament was dissolved on 24 March ; the first borough constituencies began voting a week later .
Disraeli took no public part in the electioneering , it being deemed improper for peers to make speeches to influence Commons elections .
This meant that the chief Conservatives— Disraeli , Salisbury , and India Secretary Lord Cranbrook— would not be heard from .
The election was thought likely to be close .
Once returns began to be announced , it became clear that the Conservatives were decisively beaten .
The final result gave the Liberals an absolute majority of about 50 .
Final months , death , and memorials Disraeli refused to cast blame for the defeat , which he understood was likely to be final for him .
He wrote to Lady Bradford that it was just as much work to end a government as to form one , without any of the fun .
Queen Victoria was bitter at his departure .
Among the honours he arranged before resigning as Prime Minister on 21 April 1880 was one for his private secretary , Montagu Corry , who became Baron Rowton .
A death mask resembling Disraeli Disraeli 's death mask A grave Disraeli 's tomb at Hughenden Returning to Hughenden , Disraeli brooded over his electoral dismissal , but also resumed work on Endymion , which he had begun in 1872 and laid aside before the 1874 election .
The work was rapidly completed and published by November 1880 .
He carried on a correspondence with Victoria , with letters passed through intermediaries .
When Parliament met in January 1881 , he served as Conservative leader in the Lords , attempting to serve as a moderating influence on Gladstone 's legislation .
Because of his asthma and gout , Disraeli went out as little as possible , fearing more serious episodes of illness .
In March , he fell ill with bronchitis , and emerged from bed only for a meeting with Salisbury and other Conservative leaders on the 26th .
As it became clear that this might be his final sickness , friends and opponents alike came to call .
Disraeli declined a visit from the Queen , saying , " She would only ask me to take a message to Albert . "
Almost blind , when he received the last letter from Victoria of which he was aware on 5 April , he held it momentarily , then had it read to him by Lord Barrington , a Privy Councillor .
One card , signed " A Workman " , delighted its recipient :
" Do n't die yet , we ca n't do without you . "
Despite the gravity of Disraeli 's condition , the doctors concocted optimistic bulletins for public consumption .
Prime Minister
Gladstone called several times to enquire about his rival 's condition , and wrote in his diary , " May the Almighty be near his pillow . "
There was intense public interest in Disraeli 's struggles for life .
Disraeli had customarily taken the sacrament at Easter ; when this day was observed on 17 April , there was discussion among his friends and family if he should be given the opportunity , but those against , fearing that he would lose hope , prevailed .
On the morning of the following day , Easter Monday , he became incoherent , then comatose .
Disraeli 's last confirmed words before dying at his home at 19 Curzon Street in the early morning of 19 April were " I had rather live but I am not afraid to die " .
The anniversary of Disraeli 's death was for some years commemorated in the United Kingdom as Primrose Day .
Despite having been offered a state funeral by Queen Victoria , Disraeli 's executors decided against a public procession and funeral , fearing that too large crowds would gather to do him honour .
The chief mourners at the service at Hughenden on 26
April were his brother Ralph and nephew Coningsby , to whom Hughenden would eventually pass ; Gathorne Gathorne-Hardy , Viscount Cranbrook , despite most of Disraeli 's former cabinet being present , was notably absent in Italy .
Queen Victoria was prostrated with grief , and considered ennobling Ralph or Coningsby as a memorial to Disraeli ( without children , his titles became extinct with his death ) , but decided against it on the ground that their means were too small for a peerage .
Protocol forbade her attending Disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when Elizabeth II attended the rites for the former prime minister Sir Winston Churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
A statue on a podium Statue of Disraeli in Parliament Square , London Disraeli is buried with his wife in a vault beneath the Church of St Michael and All Angels which stands in the grounds of his home , Hughenden Manor .
There is also a memorial to him in the chancel in the church , erected in his honour by Queen Victoria .
His literary executor was his private secretary , Lord Rowton .
The Disraeli vault also contains the body of Sarah Brydges Willyams , the wife of James Brydges Willyams of St Mawgan .
Disraeli carried on a long correspondence with Mrs .
Willyams , writing frankly about political affairs .
At her death in 1865 , she left him a large legacy , which helped clear his debts .
His will was proved in April 1882 at £84,019 18 s. 7 d. ( roughly equivalent to £10,705,647 in 2023 ) .
Disraeli has a memorial in Westminster Abbey , erected by the nation on the motion of Gladstone in his memorial speech on Disraeli in the House of Commons .
Gladstone had absented himself from the funeral , with his plea of the press of public business met with public mockery .
His speech was widely anticipated , if only because his dislike for Disraeli was well known .
In the event , the speech was a model of its kind , in which he avoided comment on Disraeli 's politics while praising his personal qualities .
Legacy
Disraeli 's literary and political career interacted over his lifetime and fascinated Victorian Britain , making him " one of the most eminent figures in Victorian public life " , and occasioned a large output of commentary .
Critic Shane Leslie noted three decades after his death that " Disraeli 's career was a romance such as no Eastern vizier or Western plutocrat could tell .
He began as a pioneer in dress and an aesthete of words ...
Disraeli actually made his novels come true . "
Literary
The cover of a book , entitled " Sybil ; or , the Two Nations " Title page of first edition of Sybil ( 1845 )
Disraeli 's novels are his main literary achievement .
They have from the outset divided critical opinion .
The writer R. W. Stewart observed that there have always been two criteria for judging Disraeli 's novels— political and artistic .
The critic Robert O' Kell , concurring , writes , " It is after all , even if you are a Tory of the staunchest blue , impossible to make Disraeli into a first-rate novelist .
And it is equally impossible , no matter how much you deplore the extravagances and improprieties of his works , to make him into an insignificant one . "
Disraeli 's early " silver fork " novels Vivian Grey ( 1826 ) and The Young Duke ( 1831 ) featured romanticised depictions of aristocratic life ( despite his ignorance of it ) with character sketches of well-known public figures lightly disguised .
In some of his early fiction Disraeli also portrayed himself and what he felt to be his Byronic dual nature : the poet and the man of action .
His most autobiographical novel was Contarini Fleming ( 1832 ) , an avowedly serious work that did not sell well .
The critic William Kuhn suggests that Disraeli 's fiction can be read as " the memoirs he never wrote " , revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of Victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard to what Kuhn sees as the author 's " ambiguous sexuality " .
Of the other novels of the early 1830s , Alroy is described by Blake as " profitable but unreadable " , and The Rise of Iskander ( 1833 ) and The Infernal Marriage and Ixion in Heaven ( 1834 ) made little impact .
Henrietta Temple ( 1837 ) was Disraeli 's next major success .
It draws on the events of his affair with Henrietta Sykes to tell the story of a debt-ridden young man torn between a mercenary loveless marriage and a passionate love at first sight for the eponymous heroine .
Venetia ( 1837 ) was a minor work , written to raise much-needed cash .
In the 1840s Disraeli wrote a trilogy of novels with political themes .
Coningsby attacks the evils of the Whig Reform Bill of 1832 and castigates the leaderless conservatives for not responding .
Sybil ; or , The Two Nations ( 1845 ) reveals Peel 's betrayal over the Corn Laws .
These themes are expanded in Tancred ( 1847 ) .
With Coningsby ; or , The New Generation ( 1844 ) , Disraeli , in Blake 's view , " infused the novel genre with political sensibility , espousing the belief that England 's future as a world power depended not on the complacent old guard , but on youthful , idealistic politicians . " Sybil ; or , The Two Nations was less idealistic than Coningsby ; the " two nations " of its sub-title referred to the huge economic and social gap between the privileged few and the deprived working classes .
The last was Tancred ; or , The New Crusade ( 1847 ) , promoting the Church of England 's role in reviving Britain 's flagging spirituality .
Disraeli often wrote about religion , for he was a strong promoter of the Church of England .
He was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the Church of England over to the Pope .
He consequently was a strong supporter of the Public Worship Regulation
Act 1874 which allowed the archbishops to go to court to stop the ritualists .
Lothair was " Disraeli 's ideological Pilgrim 's Progress " , It tells a story of political life with particular regard to the roles of the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches .
It reflected anti-Catholicism of the sort that was popular in Britain , and which fueled support for Italian unification ( " Risorgimento " ) .
Endymion , despite having a
Whig as hero , is a last exposition of the author 's economic policies and political beliefs .
Disraeli continued to the last to pillory his enemies in barely disguised caricatures : the character St Barbe in Endymion is widely seen as a parody of Thackeray , who had offended Disraeli more than thirty years earlier by lampooning him in Punch as " Codlingsby " .
Disraeli left an unfinished novel in which the priggish central character , Falconet , is unmistakably a caricature of Gladstone .
Blake commented that Disraeli " produced an epic poem , unbelievably bad , and a five-act blank verse tragedy , if possible worse .
Further he wrote a discourse on political theory and a political biography , the Life of Lord George Bentinck , which is excellent ... remarkably fair and accurate . "
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One Nation Conservatives caucus * Conservatism portal * icon Politics portal * flag United Kingdom portal * v * t * e Portrait of Benjamin Disraeli by John Everett Millais , 1881
In the years after Disraeli 's death , as Salisbury began his reign of more than twenty years over the Conservatives , the party emphasised the late leader 's " One Nation " views , that the Conservatives at root shared the beliefs of the working classes , with the Liberals the party of the urban élite .
The memory of Disraeli was used by the Conservatives to appeal to the working classes , with whom he was said to have had a rapport .
This aspect of his policies has been re-evaluated by historians in the 20th and 21st centuries .
In 1972 B. H. Abbott stressed that it was not Disraeli but Lord Randolph Churchill who invented the term " Tory democracy " , though it was Disraeli who made it an essential part of Conservative policy and philosophy .
In 2007 Parry wrote , " The tory democrat myth did not survive detailed scrutiny by professional historical writing of the 1960s demonstrated that Disraeli had very little interest in a programme of social legislation and was very flexible in handling parliamentary reform in 1867 . " Despite this , Parry sees Disraeli , rather than Peel , as the founder of the modern Conservative party .
The Conservative politician and writer Douglas Hurd wrote in 2013 , " was not a one-nation Conservative— and this was not simply because he never used the phrase .
He rejected the concept in its entirety . "
Disraeli 's enthusiastic propagation of the British Empire has also been seen as appealing to working-class voters .
Before his leadership of the Conservative Party , imperialism was the province of the Liberals , most notably Palmerston .
Disraeli made the Conservatives the party that most loudly supported both the Empire and military action to assert its primacy .
This came about in part because Disraeli 's own views stemmed that way , in part because he saw advantage for the Conservatives , and partially in reaction against Gladstone , who disliked the expense of empire .
Blake argued that Disraeli 's imperialism " decisively orientated the Conservative party for many years to come , and the tradition which he started was probably a bigger electoral asset in winning working-class support during the last quarter of the century than anything else " .
Some historians have commented on a romantic impulse behind Disraeli 's approach to Empire and foreign affairs :
Abbott writes , " To the mystical Tory concepts of Throne , Church , Aristocracy and People , Disraeli added Empire . "
Others have identified a strongly pragmatic aspect to his policies .
Gladstone 's biographer Philip Magnus contrasted Disraeli 's grasp of foreign affairs with that of Gladstone , who " never understood that high moral principles , in their application to foreign policy , are more often destructive of political stability than motives of national self-interest . "
In Parry 's view , Disraeli 's foreign policy " can be seen as a gigantic castle in the air ( as it was by Gladstone ) , or as an overdue attempt to force the British commercial classes to awaken to the realities of European politics . "
During his lifetime , Disraeli 's opponents , and sometimes even his friends and allies , questioned whether he sincerely held the views he propounded , or whether they were adopted by him as politically essential and lacked conviction .
Lord John Manners , in 1843 at the time of Young England , wrote , " could I only satisfy myself that D'Israeli believed all that he said , I should be more happy : his historical views are quite mine , but does he believe them ? "
Paul Smith , in his journal article on Disraeli 's politics , argues that Disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the British political pantheon . "
External videos video icon Booknotes interview with Stanley Weintraub on Disraeli : A Biography , February 6 , 1994 , C-SPAN Stanley Weintraub , in his biography of Disraeli , points out that his subject did much to advance Britain towards the 20th century , carrying one of the two great Reform Acts of the 19th despite the opposition of his Liberal rival , Gladstone .
He helped preserve constitutional monarchy by drawing the Queen out of mourning into a new symbolic national role and created the climate for what became ' Tory democracy ' .
He articulated an imperial role for Britain that would last into World War II and brought an intermittently self-isolated Britain into the concert of Europe .
Frances
Walsh comments on Disraeli 's multifaceted public life :
The debate about his place in the Conservative pantheon has continued since his death .
Disraeli fascinated and divided contemporary opinion ; he was seen by many , including some members of his own party , as an adventurer and a charlatan and by others as a far-sighted and patriotic statesman .
As an actor on the political stage he played many roles :
Byronic hero , man of letters , social critic , parliamentary virtuoso , squire of Hughenden , royal companion , European statesman .
His singular and complex personality has provided historians and biographers with a particularly stiff challenge .
Historian Llewellyn Woodward has evaluated Disraeli :
Disraeli 's political ideas have not stood the test of time.
...
His detachment from English prejudices did not give him any particular insight into foreign affairs ; as a young man he accepted the platitudes of Metternich and failed to understand the meaning of the nationalist movements in Europe .
The imperialism of his later years was equally superficial : an interpretation of politics without economics .
Disraeli liked to think of himself in terms of pure intellect , but his politics were more personal than intellectual in character .
He had far-reaching schemes but little administrative ability , and there was some foundation for Napoleon
Ill 's judgement that he was ' like all literary men , from Chateaubriand to Guizot , ignorant of the world'....
In spite of these faults .
.
.
Disraeli 's courage , quickness of wit , capacity for affection , and freedom from sordid motives earned him his position .
His ambition was of the nobler sort .
He brought politics nearer to poetry , or , at all events , to poetical prose , than any English politician since Burke .
Historical writers have often played Disraeli and Gladstone against each other as great rivals .
Roland Quinault , however , cautions not to exaggerate the confrontation : they were not direct antagonists for most of their political careers .
Indeed initially they were both loyal to the Tory party , the Church and the landed interest .
Although their paths diverged over the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 and later over fiscal policy more generally , it was not until the later 1860s that their differences over parliamentary reform , Irish and Church policy assumed great partisan significance .
Even then their personal relations remained fairly cordial until their dispute over the Eastern Question in the later 1870s .
Role of his Jewishness Further information :
History of the Jews in England
By 1882 , 46,000 Jews lived in England , and by 1890 , Jewish emancipation was complete .
Since 1858 , Parliament has never been without practicing Jewish members .
The first Jewish Lord Mayor of London , Sir David Salomons , was elected in 1855 , followed by the 1858 emancipation of the Jews .
On 26 July 1858 , Lionel de Rothschild was allowed to sit in the House of Commons when the hitherto specifically Christian oath of office was changed .
Disraeli , a baptised Christian of Jewish parentage , was already an MP , as the mandated oath of office presented no barrier to him .
In 1884 Nathan Mayer Rothschild , 1st Baron Rothschild , became the first Jewish member of the British House of Lords ;
Disraeli was already a member .
As a leader of the Conservative Party , which had ties to the landed aristocracy , Disraeli used his Jewish ancestry to claim an aristocratic heritage of his own .
His biographer Jonathan Parry argues :
Disraeli convinced himself ( wrongly ) that he derived from the Sephardi aristocracy of Iberian Jews driven from Spain at the end of the fifteenth century .
.
..Presenting himself as Jewish symbolized Disraeli 's uniqueness when he was fighting for respect , and explained his set-backs .
Presenting Jewishness as aristocratic and religious legitimized his claim to understand the perils facing modern England and to offer ' national ' solutions to them .
English toryism was ' copied from the mighty prototype ' ( Coningsby , bk 4 , chap.
15 ) .
Disraeli was thus able to square his Jewishness with his equally deep attachment to England and her history .
Todd Endelman points out that " The link between Jews and old clothes was so fixed in the popular imagination that Victorian political cartoonists regularly drew Benjamin Disraeli as an old clothes man in order to stress his Jewishness . "
He adds , " Before the 1990s...few biographers of Disraeli or historians of Victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of Jewishness . " According to Michael Ragussis : What began in the 1830s as scattered anti-Semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his Jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-Semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that Disraeli was a crypto-Jew .
Popular culture Disraeli , the first person caricatured in the London magazine Vanity Fair , 30 January 1869 .
Caricatures led to a rapid increase in demand for the magazine .
In 1929 , actor George Arliss won the Oscar for personifying Disraeli 's " paternalistic , kindly , homely statesmanship " .
Historian Michael Diamond asserts that for British music hall patrons in the 1880s and 1890s , " xenophobia and pride in empire " were reflected in the halls ' most popular political heroes : all were Conservatives and Disraeli stood out above all , even decades after his death , while Gladstone was used as a villain .
Film historian Roy Armes has argued that historical films helped maintain the political status quo in Britain in the 1920s and 1930s by imposing an establishment viewpoint that emphasized the greatness of monarchy , empire , and tradition .
The films created " a facsimile world where existing values were invariably validated by events in the film and where all discord could be turned into harmony by an acceptance of the status quo " .
Steven Fielding has argued that Disraeli was an especially popular film hero : " historical dramas favoured Disraeli over Gladstone and , more substantively , promulgated an essentially deferential view of democratic leadership . "
Stage and screen actor George Arliss was known for his portrayals of Disraeli , winning the Academy Award for Best Actor for 1929 's Disraeli .
Fielding says Arliss " personified the kind of paternalistic , kindly , homely statesmanship that appealed to a significant proportion of the cinema audience ...
Even workers attending Labour party meetings deferred to leaders with an elevated social background who showed they cared . "
John Gielgud portrayed Disraeli in 1941 , in Thorold Dickinson 's morale-boosting film The Prime Minister , which followed the politician from the age of 30 to that of 70 .
Alec Guinness portrayed him in The Mudlark ( 1950 ) .
Ian McShane starred in the four-part 1978 ATV miniseries Disraeli : Portrait of a Romantic , written by David Butler .
Presented in the U.S. on PBS 's Masterpiece
Theatre in 1980 , it was nominated for the Emmy Award for Outstanding Limited Series .
Richard
Pasco played Disraeli in the ITV series Number 10 in 1983 .
In the 1997 film Mrs Brown , Disraeli was played by Antony Sher .
Works
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Right-wing politics + Alt + Authoritarianism + Centre + Dictatorship + Far + New * Small-c conservative * Toryism * Conservatism portal * icon Politics portal * v * t * e Novels * Vivian Grey ( 1826 , revised 1853 ) *
Popanilla ( 1828 ) * The Young Duke ( 1831 , revised 1853 ) * Contarini Fleming ( 1832 ) *
Ixion in Heaven ( 1832-33 ) * The Wondrous Tale of Alroy ( 1833 ) - heavily revised as Alroy : A Romance ( 1846 and 1871 ) *
The Rise of Iskander ( 1833 ) * The Infernal Marriage ( unfinished ; 1834 ) * A Year at Hartlebury , or The Election - with Sarah Disraeli ( 1834 ) * Henrietta Temple ( 1837 ) * Venetia ( 1837 ) * Lothair ( 1870 ) * Endymion ( 1880 ) *
Falconet ( unfinished , 1881 ; posthumously published in 1905 ) Young England Trilogy 1 .
Coningsby , or the New Generation ( 1844 ) 2 .
Sybil , or The Two Nations ( 1845 )
3. Tancred , or the New Crusade ( 1847 ) Poetry * The Revolutionary Epick ( 1834 )
Drama *
The Tragedy of Count Alarcos ( 1839 ) Non-fiction * An Inquiry into the Plans , Progress , and Policy of the American Mining Companies ( 1825 ) * Lawyers and Legislators : or , Notes , on the American Mining Companies ( 1825 ) *
The present state of Mexico ( 1825 ) *
England and France , or a Cure for the Ministerial Gallomania ( 1832 ) * What Is He ? ( 1833 ) * The Vindication of the English Constitution ( 1835 ) * The Letters of Runnymede ( 1836 ) * Lord George Bentinck ( 1852 )
Arms CAPTION : Coat of arms of Benjamin Disraeli Crest Issuant from a wreath of oak Proper a castle triple-towered Argent .
Escutcheon
Per saltire Gules and Argent a castle triple-towered in chief Argent two lions rampant in fess Sable and an eagle displayed in base Or .
Supporters Dexter an eagle
Or sinister a lion Or each gorged with a collar Gules and pendent therefrom an escutcheon of the last charged with a tower Argent .
Motto Forti Nihili Difficile Notes and references


Recall: 89.83%

Annotated text


prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] of the united kingdom [PLACE] ( 1868 ; 1874-1880 ) " disraeli [PERSON] " redirects here . for other uses [USE] , see [PERSON] disraeli [PERSON] ( disambiguation [ACT] ) . the right honourable the earl [PERSON] of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli [PERSON] in old age [PROPERTY] , wearing a double-breasted suit [TENDENCY] , bow tie [PERSON] and hat 1878 portrait prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] [HUMAN ROLE] of the united kingdom [PLACE] in office [PLACE] 20 february [PERIOD] 1874 - 21 april [PERIOD] 1880 monarch [PERSON] victoria [PLACE] preceded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] succeeded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] in office [PLACE] 27 february [PERIOD] 1868 - 1 december [PERIOD] 1868 monarch [PERSON] victoria [PLACE] preceded by the earl [PERSON] of derby [PERSON] succeeded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] leader [PERSON] of the opposition [EVENT] in office [PLACE] 21 april [PERIOD] 1880 - 19 april [PERIOD] 1881 monarch [PERSON] victoria [PLACE] prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] william ewart gladstone [PERSON] preceded by marquess [PERSON] of hartington [PLACE] succeeded by the marquess [PERSON] of salisbury [PERSON] in office [PLACE] 1 december [PERIOD] 1868 - 17 february [PERIOD] 1874 monarch [PERSON] victoria [PLACE] prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] william ewart gladstone [PERSON] preceded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] succeeded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] chancellor [PERSON] of the exchequer [AMOUNT] in office [PLACE] 6 july [PERIOD] 1866 - 29 february [PERIOD] 1868 prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] the earl [PERSON] of derby [PERSON] preceded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] succeeded by george ward hunt [PERSON] in office [PLACE] 26 february [PERIOD] 1858 - 11 june [PERIOD] 1859 prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] the earl [PERSON] of derby [PERSON] preceded by sir george [PERSON] cornewall lewis [PERSON] succeeded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] in office [PLACE] 27 february [PERIOD] 1852 - 17 december [PERIOD] 1852 prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] the earl [PERSON] of derby [PERSON] preceded by sir charles wood [WOOD] , 3rd baronet [PERSON] succeeded by william ewart gladstone [PERSON] personal details [PERSON] born benjamin [PERSON] d' israeli [PERSON] ( 1804-12-21) 21 december [PERIOD] 1804 bloomsbury [PLACE] , middlesex [PLACE] , england [PLACE] died 19 april [PERIOD] 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair [PERSON] , london [PLACE] , england [PLACE] political party conservative [PERSON] other political affiliations young england [PLACE] [PERSON] ( 1840s ) spouse mary anne evans ​ ​ [PERSON] ( m. 1839 ; died 1872 ) parents [PERSON] * isaac d' israeli [PERSON] * maria basevi [UNKNOWN] signature cursive signature [PLACE] in ink writing [UNKNOWN] career [NUMBER] notable works list [LOCATION] * * vivian grey [PERSON] * popanilla [UNKNOWN] * the young duke [PERSON] * contarini [PERSON] fleming * ixion [UNKNOWN] in heaven [PERSON] * the wondrous tale [PERSON] of alroy [PERSON] * the rise [PERSON] of iskander [PERSON] * the infernal marriage [EVENT] * henrietta temple [PERSON] * venetia [PERSON] * coningsby [UNKNOWN] * sybil [PERSON] * tancred [PERSON] * lothair [PERSON] * endymion benjamin disraeli [PERSON] [PERSON] , 1st earl [PERSON] of beaconsfield [PLACE] ( 21 december [PERIOD] 1804 - 19 april [PERIOD] 1881 ) was a british [UNKNOWN] statesman [PERSON] , conservative [PERSON] politician [PERSON] and writer [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] twice served as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] of the united kingdom [PLACE] . he played a central role [ROLE] in the creation [EVENT] of the modern conservative party [FORCE] , defining its policies [RULE] and its broad outreach [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] is remembered for his influential voice [DECISION] in world affairs [PLACE] , his political battles [PERSON] with the liberal party leader [PERSON] william ewart gladstone [PERSON] [PERSON] , and his one-nation conservatism [ATTITUDE] or " tory democracy [QUALITY] " . he made the conservatives [UNKNOWN] the party [FORCE] most identified with the british empire [STATE] and military action [ACTION] to expand it , both of which were popular among british voters [PERSON] . he is the only british prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] [HUMAN ROLE] to have been born jewish [UNKNOWN] . disraeli [PERSON] was born in bloomsbury [PLACE] , at that time [PERIOD] a part of middlesex [PLACE] . his father [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] judaism [CONCEPT] after a dispute [DISPUTE] at his synagogue [ACTIVITY] ; benjamin [PERSON] became an anglican [UNKNOWN] at the age [PROPERTY] of 12 . after several unsuccessful attempts [ACTION] , disraeli [PERSON] entered the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] in 1837 . in 1846 , prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] robert peel [PERSON] split [PLACE] the party [FORCE] over his proposal [ABSTRACT ENTITY] to repeal [ACT] the corn laws [PERSON] , which involved ending the tariff [PERSON] on imported grain [QUANTITY] . disraeli [PERSON] clashed with peel [PERSON] in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] , becoming a major figure [FIGURE] in the party [FORCE] . when lord derby [PERSON] , the party leader [PERSON] , thrice formed governments [GOVERNMENT] in the 1850s and 1860s , disraeli [PERSON] served as chancellor [PERSON] of the exchequer [AMOUNT] and leader [PERSON] of the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] . upon derby [PERSON] 's retirement [ACT] in 1868 , disraeli [PERSON] became prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] briefly before losing [PROCESS] that year [PERIOD] 's general election [POWER] . he returned to the opposition [EVENT] before leading the party [FORCE] to a majority [PROPERTY] in the 1874 general election [POWER] . he maintained a close friendship [RELATIONSHIP] with queen victoria [PLACE] who [UNKNOWN] , in 1876 , elevated him to the peerage [COLLECTION] as earl [PERSON] of beaconsfield [PLACE] . disraeli [PERSON] 's second [PERSON] term [TERM] was dominated by the eastern question [QUESTION] — the slow decay [PROCESS] of the ottoman empire [STATE] and the desire [EVENT] of other european powers [POWER] , such as russia [PLACE] , to gain at its expense [ACT] . disraeli [PERSON] arranged for the british [UNKNOWN] to purchase [AMOUNT] a major interest [ELEMENT] in the suez canal [PERSON] company [INSTITUTION] in egypt [PLACE] . in 1878 , faced with russian victories [CONDITION] against the ottomans [PLACE] , he worked at the congress [ACTIVITY] of berlin [PLACE] to obtain peace [EVENT] in the balkans [UNKNOWN] at terms [TERM] favourable to britain [PLACE] and unfavourable to russia [PLACE] , its longstanding enemy [PERSON] . this diplomatic victory [PERSON] established disraeli [PERSON] as one of europe [PLACE] 's leading statesmen [PERSON] . world events [PLACE] thereafter moved against the conservatives [UNKNOWN] . controversial wars [EVENT] in afghanistan [PLACE] and south africa [PLACE] undermined his public [UNKNOWN] support [ACT] . he angered farmers [PERSON] by refusing to reinstitute the corn laws [PERSON] in response [ACT] to poor [UNKNOWN] harvests [UNKNOWN] and cheap imported grain [QUANTITY] . with gladstone [PERSON] conducting a massive speaking campaign [PERSON] , the liberals [PERSON] defeated disraeli [PERSON] 's conservatives [UNKNOWN] at the 1880 general election [POWER] . in his final months [PERIOD] , disraeli [PERSON] led the conservatives [UNKNOWN] in opposition [EVENT] . disraeli [PERSON] wrote novels [UNKNOWN] throughout his career [NUMBER] , beginning in 1826 , and published his last [UNKNOWN] completed novel [EVENT] , endymion [PERSON] , shortly before he died at the age [PROPERTY] of 76 . early life childhood disraeli [PERSON] was born on 21 december [PERIOD] 1804 at 6 king [PERSON] 's road [PLACE] , bedford row [PERSON] , bloomsbury [PLACE] , london [PLACE] , the second [PERSON] child [PERSON] and eldest son [PERSON] of isaac d' israeli [PERSON] , a literary critic and historian , and maria [PLACE] ( miriam [PERSON] ) , née basevi [UNKNOWN] . the family [HUMAN GROUP] was mostly from italy [PLACE] , of sephardic jewish [UNKNOWN] mercantile background [INFORMATION] . he also had some ashkenazi [PERSON] jewish [UNKNOWN] ancestors [WORD] . he later romanticised his origins [PERSON] , claiming his father [PERSON] 's family [HUMAN GROUP] was of grand portuguese [UNKNOWN] and venetian descent [PLACE] ; in fact [UNKNOWN] , isaac [PLACE] 's family [HUMAN GROUP] was of no great distinction [SOUND] , but on disraeli [PERSON] 's mother [PERSON] 's side [PLACE] , in which he took no interest [ELEMENT] , there were some distinguished forebears [UNKNOWN] , including isaac cardoso [PERSON] , as well as members [PERSON] of the goldsmids [UNKNOWN] , the mocattas [UNKNOWN] and the montefiores [UNKNOWN] . historians [PERSON] differ on disraeli [PERSON] 's motives [POWER] for rewriting his family history [UNIT] : bernard glassman [PERSON] argues [UNKNOWN] that it was intended to give him status [STATUS] comparable to that of england [PLACE] 's ruling elite [PERSON] ; sarah bradford [PERSON] believes " his dislike of the commonplace [STATEMENT] would not allow him to accept the facts [UNKNOWN] of his birth [CONDITION] as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " . three portraits [IMAGE] ; a man [PERSON] and two women disraeli [PERSON] 's father [PERSON] , mother [PERSON] and sister [PERSON] isaac [PLACE] , maria [PLACE] and sarah disraeli [PERSON] 's siblings [PERSON] were sarah [PERSON] , naphtali [PERSON] ( born and died 1807 ) , ralph [PERSON] and james [PERSON] ( " jem [PERSON] " ) . he was close to his sister [PERSON] and on affectionate but more [PLACE] distant terms [TERM] with his surviving brothers [PERSON] . details [PERSON] of his schooling [PROCESS] are sketchy . from the age [PROPERTY] of about six he was a day boy [PERSON] at a dame school [INSTITUTION] in islington [PLACE] , which one of his biographers [PERSON] described as " for those days [PERIOD] a very high-class establishment [EVENT] " . two years [PERIOD] later or so— the exact date [RESULT] has not been ascertained— he was sent as a boarder [PERSON] to rev john potticary [PERSON] 's school [INSTITUTION] at blackheath [UNKNOWN] . following a quarrel [DISPUTE] in 1813 with the bevis marks synagogue [ACTIVITY] , his father [PERSON] renounced judaism [CONCEPT] and had the four children [PERSON] baptised into the church [PERSON] of england [PLACE] in july [PERIOD] and august [PERIOD] 1817 . isaac d'israeli [PERSON] had never taken religion [UNKNOWN] very seriously but had remained a conforming member [PERSON] of the synagogue [ACTIVITY] . isaac [PLACE] 's father [PERSON] , benjamin [PERSON] , was a prominent [ACT] and devout member [PERSON] ; it was probably out of respect [EVENT] for him that isaac [PLACE] did not leave when he fell out with the synagogue authorities [STATUS] in 1813 . after benjamin senior [PERSON] died in 1816 , isaac [PLACE] felt free to leave the congregation [ENTITY] following a second [PERSON] dispute [DISPUTE] . isaac [PLACE] 's friend sharon turner [PERSON] , a solicitor [PERSON] , convinced him that although he could comfortably remain unattached to any formal religion [UNKNOWN] it would be disadvantageous to the children [PERSON] if they did so . turner [PERSON] stood as godfather [PERSON] when benjamin [PERSON] was baptised , aged twelve , on 31 july [PERIOD] 1817 . conversion [SPEECH ACT] enabled disraeli [PERSON] to contemplate a career [NUMBER] in politics [ACTION] . there had been members [PERSON] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] ( mps [UNKNOWN] ) from jewish [UNKNOWN] families [INSTANCE] since sampson gideon [PERSON] in 1770 . however , until the jews relief act [ACT] 1858 , mps [UNKNOWN] were required to take the oath [ASSET] of allegiance [STATE] " on the true faith [PERSON] of a christian [PERSON] " , necessitating at least nominal conversion [SPEECH ACT] . it is not known whether disraeli [PERSON] formed any ambition [EVENT] for a parliamentary career [NUMBER] at the time [PERIOD] of his baptism [ACT] , but there is no doubt [STATE] that he bitterly regretted his parents [PERSON] ' decision [DECISION] not to send him to winchester college [INSTITUTION] , one of the great public [UNKNOWN] schools [UNKNOWN] which consistently provided recruits [UNKNOWN] to the political elite [PERSON] . his two younger brothers [PERSON] were sent there , and it is not clear why isaac [PLACE] chose to send his eldest son [PERSON] to a much less prestigious school [INSTITUTION] . the boy [PERSON] evidently held his mother [PERSON] responsible for the decision [DECISION] ; bradford [PERSON] speculates that " benjamin [PERSON] 's delicate health [PROPERTY] and his obviously jewish [UNKNOWN] appearance [PERSON] may [PERIOD] have had something to do with it . " the school chosen [UNKNOWN] for him was run by eliezer cogan [PERSON] at higham hill [HILL] in walthamstow [UNKNOWN] . he began there in the autumn term [TERM] of 1817 ; he later recalled his education [PROCESS] : i was at school [INSTITUTION] for two or three years [PERIOD] under the revd [UNKNOWN] . dr cogan [PERSON] , a greek scholar [PERSON] of eminence [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] had contributed notes [UNKNOWN] to the a schylus [UNKNOWN] of bishop blomfield [PERSON] , & was himself the editor [PERSON] of the greek gnostic poets [UNKNOWN] . after this i was with a private [PERSON] tutor [INSTITUTION] for two years [PERIOD] in my own county [PLACE] , & my education [PROCESS] was severely classical . too much so ; in the pride [PERSON] of boyish erudition [ACT] , i edited the idonisian eclogue [UNKNOWN] of theocritus [PERSON] , wh . was privately printed . this was my first production [OCCURRENCE] : puerile pedantry [UNKNOWN] . 1820s in november [PERIOD] 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday [GROUP] , disraeli [PERSON] was articled as a clerk [PERSON] to a firm [INSTITUTION] of solicitors— swain [PERSON] , stevens [PERSON] , maples [PERSON] , pearse [PERSON] and hunt—in [UNKNOWN] the city [PLACE] of london [PLACE] . t f maples [PERSON] was not only the young disraeli [PERSON] 's employer [PERSON] and a friend [PERSON] of his father [PERSON] , but also his prospective father-in-law : isaac [PLACE] and maples [PERSON] considered that the latter [UNKNOWN] 's only daughter [PERSON] might be a suitable match [FORM] for benjamin [PERSON] . a friendship [RELATIONSHIP] developed , but there was no romance [PERSON] . the firm [INSTITUTION] had a large and profitable business [STATE] , and as the biographer r w davis [PERSON] observes , the clerkship [EVENT] was " the kind [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of secure [UNKNOWN] , respectable position [POSITION] that many fathers dream [PERSON] of for their children [PERSON] " . although biographers [PERSON] including robert blake [PERSON] and bradford comment [EVENT] that such a post [SEQUENCE] was incompatible with disraeli [PERSON] 's romantic and ambitious nature [NATURE] , he reportedly gave his employers [PERSON] satisfactory [PERSON] service [INSTITUTION] , and later professed to have learned much there . he recalled : i had some scruples [ACT] , for even then i dreamed of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] . my father [PERSON] 's refrain [EVENT] always was ' philip carteret webb [PERSON] ' , who [UNKNOWN] was the most eminent solicitor [PERSON] of his boyhood [STATE] and who [UNKNOWN] was an mp . it would be a mistake [EVENT] to suppose that the two years [PERIOD] and more [PLACE] that i was in the office [PLACE] of our friend [PERSON] were wasted . i have often thought , though i have often regretted the university [INSTITUTION] , that it was much the reverse [PORTION] . a young man [PERSON] of vaguely semitic appearance [PERSON] , with long and curly black hair portrait [PERSON] of benjamin disraeli [PERSON] by francis grant [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] as a young man—a retrospective portrayal [RESULT] painted in 1852 the year [PERIOD] after joining maples [PERSON] ' firm [INSTITUTION] , benjamin [PERSON] changed his surname [PORTION] from d' israeli to disraeli [PERSON] . his reasons [EVENT] are unknown , but the biographer bernard glassman [PERSON] surmises that it was to avoid being confused with his father [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] 's sister [PERSON] and brothers [PERSON] adopted the new [PLACE] version [PERMISSION] of the name [NAME] ; isaac [PLACE] and his wife [PERSON] retained the older form [FORM] . disraeli [PERSON] toured belgium [PLACE] and the rhine valley [PERSON] with his father [PERSON] in the summer [PERSON] of 1824 . he later wrote that while travelling on the rhine [PERSON] he decided to abandon his position [POSITION] : " i determined when descending those magical waters [WATER] that i would not be a lawyer [PERSON] . " on their return [STATEMENT] to england [PLACE] he left [UNKNOWN] the solicitors [PERSON] , at the suggestion [SUGGESTION] of maples [PERSON] , with the aim [PERSON] of qualifying as a barrister [PERSON] . he enrolled as a student [PERSON] at lincoln [PERSON] 's inn [GOVERNMENT] and joined the chambers [NUMBER] of his uncle [PERSON] , nathaniel basevy [PERSON] , and then those of benjamin austen [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] persuaded isaac [PLACE] that disraeli [PERSON] would never make a barrister [PERSON] and should be allowed to pursue a literary career [NUMBER] . he had made a tentative start [UNKNOWN] : in may [PERIOD] 1824 he submitted a manuscript [EVENT] to his father [PERSON] 's friend [PERSON] , the publisher john murray [PERSON] [PERSON] , but withdrew it before murray [PERSON] could decide whether to publish it . released from the law [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] did some work [ACTIVITY] for murray [PERSON] , but turned most of his attention [ELEMENT] to speculative dealing on the stock exchange [RESULT] . there was at the time [PERIOD] a boom [PERSON] in shares [ACTION] in south american [PLACE] mining companies [UNKNOWN] . spain [PLACE] was losing [PROCESS] its south american [PLACE] colonies [SEQUENCE] in the face [PORTION] of rebellions [FORCE] . at the urging [UNKNOWN] of george [PERSON] canning the british government [GOVERNMENT] recognised the new [PLACE] independent governments [GOVERNMENT] of argentina [PLACE] ( 1824 ) , colombia [PLACE] and mexico [PLACE] ( both 1825 ) . with no money [MONEY] of his own , disraeli [PERSON] borrowed money [MONEY] to invest . he became involved with the financier j. d [UNKNOWN] . powles [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] was prominent [ACT] among those encouraging the mining boom [PERSON] . in 1825 , disraeli [PERSON] wrote three anonymous pamphlets [PERSON] for powles [PERSON] , promoting the companies [UNKNOWN] . the pamphlets [PERSON] were published by john murray [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] invested heavily in the boom [PERSON] . john murray [PERSON] and j. g. lockhart [PERSON] murray [PERSON] had ambitions [EVENT] to establish a new [PLACE] morning paper [PERSON] to compete with the times [UNKNOWN] . in 1825 disraeli [PERSON] convinced him that he should proceed . the new [PLACE] paper [PERSON] , the representative [EVENT] , promoted the mines [FORCE] and those politicians [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] supported them , particularly canning . disraeli [PERSON] impressed murray [PERSON] with his energy [ENERGY] and commitment [COMMITMENT] to the project [ACTION] , but he failed in his key task [AMOUNT] of persuading the eminent writer john gibson lockhart [PERSON] to edit the paper [PERSON] . after that , disraeli [PERSON] 's influence [POWER] on murray [PERSON] waned , and to his resentment [PERSON] he was sidelined in the affairs [PLACE] of the representative [EVENT] . the paper [PERSON] survived only six months [PERIOD] , partly because the mining bubble [PERIOD] burst in late [PERIOD] 1825 , and partly because , according to blake [PERSON] , the paper [PERSON] was " atrociously edited " . the bursting [ACTIVITY] of the mining bubble [PERIOD] was ruinous for disraeli [PERSON] . by june [PERIOD] 1825 he and his business partners [GROUP] had lost £7,000 . disraeli [PERSON] could not pay off the last [UNKNOWN] of his debts [MONEY] from this debacle [EVENT] until 1849 . he turned to writing [UNKNOWN] , motivated partly by his desperate need [UNKNOWN] for money [MONEY] , and partly by a wish [PERSON] for revenge [FORM] on murray [PERSON] and others [UNKNOWN] by whom he felt slighted . there was a vogue [EVENT] for what was called " silver-fork fiction [STATEMENT] " — novels [UNKNOWN] depicting aristocratic life [EVENT] , usually by anonymous authors [PERSON] , read by the aspirational middle classes [UNKNOWN] . disraeli [PERSON] 's first novel [EVENT] , vivian grey [PERSON] , published anonymously in four volumes [AMOUNT] in 1826-27 , was a thinly veiled re-telling of the affair [PLACE] of the representative [EVENT] . it sold well , but caused much offence [UNKNOWN] in influential circles [UNKNOWN] when the authorship [PROCESS] was discovered . disraeli [PERSON] , then just 23 , did not move in high society [INSTITUTION] , as the numerous solecisms [CONCEPT] in his book [ENTITY] made obvious . reviewers [PERSON] were sharply critical on these grounds [AMOUNT] of both the author [PERSON] and the book [ENTITY] . murray [PERSON] and lockhart [PERSON] , men [PERSON] of great influence [POWER] in literary circles [UNKNOWN] , believed that disraeli [PERSON] had caricatured them and abused their confidence—an accusation [AMOUNT] denied by the author [PERSON] but repeated by many of his biographers [PERSON] . in later editions disraeli [PERSON] made many changes [UNKNOWN] , softening his satire [DEVICE] , but the damage [EVENT] to his reputation [REPUTATION] proved long-lasting . disraeli [PERSON] 's biographer jonathan parry [PERSON] writes that the financial failure [STATE] and personal criticism [ACT] that disraeli [PERSON] suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger [CONCEPT] for a serious nervous crisis [EVENT] affecting him over the next four years [PERIOD] : " he had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature [NATURE] , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . " he was still living [PERSON] with his parents [PERSON] in london [PLACE] , but in search [ACTION] of the " change [UNKNOWN] of air [AIR] " recommended by the family [HUMAN GROUP] 's doctors [RESOURCE] , isaac [PLACE] took a succession [SUCCESSION] of houses [UNKNOWN] in the country [PLACE] and on the coast [EVENT] , before disraeli [PERSON] sought wider horizons [PLACE] . 1830-1837 together [UNKNOWN] with his sister [PERSON] 's fiancé [UNKNOWN] , william meredith [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] travelled widely in southern europe [PLACE] and beyond in 1830-31 . the trip [POSITION] was financed partly by another high society novel [EVENT] , the young duke [PERSON] , written in 1829-30 . the tour [EVENT] was cut short [PERMISSION] suddenly by meredith [PERSON] 's death [EVENT] from smallpox [PERSON] in cairo [PLACE] in july [PERIOD] 1831 . despite this tragedy [SITUATION] , and the need [UNKNOWN] for treatment [TREATMENT] for a sexually transmitted disease [DISEASE] on his return [STATEMENT] , disraeli [PERSON] felt enriched by his experiences [EFFECT] . he became , in parry [PERSON] 's words [WORD] , " aware of values [VALUE] that seemed denied to his insular countrymen [PERSON] . the journey [PERSON] encouraged his self-consciousness , his moral relativism [RULE] , and his interest [ELEMENT] in eastern [PLACE] racial and religious attitudes [ATTITUDE] . " blake [PERSON] regards the tour [EVENT] as one of the formative experiences [EFFECT] of disraeli [PERSON] 's career [NUMBER] : " he impressions [GARMENT] that it made on him were life-lasting . they conditioned his attitude [ATTITUDE] toward some of the most important political problems [EVENT] which faced him in his later years— especially the eastern question [QUESTION] ; they also coloured many of his novels [UNKNOWN] . " disraeli [PERSON] wrote two novels [UNKNOWN] in the aftermath [PLACE] of the tour [EVENT] . contarini [PERSON] fleming ( 1832 ) was avowedly a self-portrait . it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography [PERSON] " and depicts the conflicting elements [ELEMENT] of its hero [PERSON] 's character [FORCE] : the duality [ACT] of northern and mediterranean [PLACE] ancestry [PERSON] , the dreaming artist [PERSON] and the bold man [PERSON] of action [ACTION] . as parry [PERSON] observes , the book [ENTITY] ends on a political note [ABILITY] , setting out europe [PLACE] 's progress [ACTION] " from feudal [UNKNOWN] to federal principles [PERSON] " . the wondrous tale [PERSON] of alroy [PERSON] the following year [PERIOD] portrayed the problems [EVENT] of a medieval jew [PERSON] in deciding between a small [PERSON] , exclusively jewish [UNKNOWN] state [STATE] and a large empire [STATE] embracing all . two men [PERSON] and two women friends [PERSON] and allies [PERSON] of disraeli [PERSON] in the 1830s : clockwise [PERSON] from top [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] croker [PERSON] , lyndhurst [UNKNOWN] , henrietta sykes [PERSON] and lady londonderry [PERSON] after these novels [UNKNOWN] were published , disraeli [PERSON] declared that he would " write no more [PLACE] about myself " . he had already turned his attention [ELEMENT] to politics [ACTION] in 1832 , during the great crisis [EVENT] over the reform bill [PERSON] . he contributed to an anti- whig [LIQUID] pamphlet [PERSON] edited by john wilson croker [PERSON] and published by murray entitled england [PLACE] and france [PLACE] : or a cure [ELEMENT] for ministerial gallomania [UNKNOWN] . the choice [EVENT] of a tory [PERSON] publication [ACTION] was regarded as strange by disraeli [PERSON] 's friends [PERSON] and relatives [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] thought him more [PLACE] of a radical [PERSON] . indeed , he had objected to murray [PERSON] about croker [PERSON] 's inserting " high tory [PERSON] " sentiment [EVENT] : disraeli [PERSON] remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse [UNKNOWN] to the general measure [MEASURE] of reform [AMOUNT] can issue [EVENT] from my pen [PLACE] . " moreover , at the time gallomania [UNKNOWN] was published , disraeli [PERSON] was electioneering [ACTIVITY] in high wycombe [PERSON] in the radical [PERSON] interest [ELEMENT] . disraeli [PERSON] 's politics [ACTION] at the time [PERIOD] were influenced both by his rebellious streak [PERSON] and his desire [EVENT] to make his mark [ORGANISATION] . at that time [PERIOD] , british politics [ACTION] were dominated by the aristocracy [SET] , with a few [UNKNOWN] powerful commoners [PERSON] . the whigs [LIQUID] derived from the coalition [GROUP] of lords [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] had forced through the bill [PERSON] of rights [UNKNOWN] 1689 and in some cases [STUDY] were their descendants [ELEMENT] . the tories [UNKNOWN] tended to support [ACT] king [PERSON] and church [PERSON] and sought to thwart political change [UNKNOWN] . a small [PERSON] number [NUMBER] of radicals [PERSON] , generally from northern constituencies [PLACE] , were the strongest advocates [PERSON] of continuing reform [AMOUNT] . in the early 1830s the tories [UNKNOWN] and the interests [ELEMENT] they represented appeared to be a lost cause [CAUSE] . the other great party [FORCE] , the whigs [LIQUID] , were anathema [PERSON] to disraeli [PERSON] : " toryism [CONCEPT] is worn out & i cannot condescend to be a whig [LIQUID] . " there was a by-election and a general election [POWER] in 1832 ; disraeli [PERSON] unsuccessfully stood as a radical [PERSON] at high wycombe [PERSON] in each . disraeli [PERSON] 's political views [PERSON] embraced certain radical [PERSON] policies [RULE] , particularly electoral reform [AMOUNT] , and also some tory [PERSON] ones [UNKNOWN] , including protectionism [SYSTEM] . he began to move in tory circles [UNKNOWN] . in 1834 he was introduced to the former lord chancellor [PERSON] , lord lyndhurst [UNKNOWN] , by henrietta sykes [PERSON] , wife [PERSON] of sir francis sykes [PERSON] . she was having an affair [PLACE] with lyndhurst [UNKNOWN] and began another with disraeli [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] and lyndhurst [UNKNOWN] took an immediate liking [LANGUAGE] to each other . lyndhurst [UNKNOWN] was an indiscreet gossip [PERSON] with a fondness [QUALITY] for intrigue [UNKNOWN] ; this appealed greatly to disraeli [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] became his secretary [PERSON] and go-between . in 1835 disraeli [PERSON] stood for the last [UNKNOWN] time [PERIOD] as a radical [PERSON] , again unsuccessfully contesting high wycombe [PERSON] . two men [PERSON] of victorian [PERSON] appearance opponents [PERSON] of disraeli [PERSON] : o' connell [PERSON] and labouchere [UNKNOWN] in april [PERIOD] 1835 , disraeli [PERSON] fought a by-election at taunton [PERSON] as a tory candidate [PERSON] . the irish [PERSON] mp daniel o'connell [UNKNOWN] , misled by inaccurate press reports [SYMBOL] , thought disraeli [PERSON] had slandered him while electioneering [ACTIVITY] at taunton [PERSON] ; he launched an outspoken attack [EVENT] , referring to disraeli [PERSON] as : a reptile [UNKNOWN] ... just fit now , after being twice discarded by the people [HUMAN GROUP] , to become a conservative [PERSON] . he possesses all the necessary requisites [UNKNOWN] of perfidy [UNKNOWN] , selfishness [QUALITY] , depravity [ACT] , want of principle [PERSON] , etc. , which would qualify him for the change [UNKNOWN] . his name [NAME] shows that he is of jewish [UNKNOWN] origin [PERSON] . i do not use [USE] it as a term [TERM] of reproach [CAUSE] ; there are many most respectable jews [PERSON] . but there are , as in every other people [HUMAN GROUP] , some of the lowest and most disgusting grade [PERSON] of moral turpitude [QUALITY] ; and of those i look upon mr . disraeli [PERSON] as the worst . disraeli [PERSON] 's public [UNKNOWN] exchanges [RESULT] with o'connell [UNKNOWN] , extensively reproduced in the times [UNKNOWN] , included a demand [EVENT] for a duel [PERSON] with the 60-year-old o'connell [UNKNOWN] 's son [PERSON] ( which resulted in disraeli [PERSON] 's temporary detention [RESOURCE] by the authorities [STATUS] ) , a reference [NUMBER] to " the inextinguishable [UNKNOWN] hatred with which shall pursue existence [ENTITY] " , and the accusation [AMOUNT] that o'connell [UNKNOWN] 's supporters [UNKNOWN] had a " princely revenue [MONEY] wrung from a starving race [RACE] of fanatical slaves [DEVICE] " . disraeli [PERSON] was highly gratified by the dispute [DISPUTE] , which propelled him to general public [UNKNOWN] notice [AMOUNT] for the first time [PERIOD] . he did not defeat [BODY] the incumbent whig member [PERSON] , henry [PERSON] labouchere [UNKNOWN] , but the taunton constituency [PLACE] was regarded as unwinnable by the tories [UNKNOWN] . disraeli [PERSON] kept labouchere [UNKNOWN] 's majority [PROPERTY] down to 170 , a good [UNKNOWN] showing [UNKNOWN] that put him in line [PERSON] for a winnable seat [PROPERTY] in the near future [VALUE] . with lyndhurst [UNKNOWN] 's encouragement disraeli [PERSON] turned to writing [UNKNOWN] propaganda [STATE] for his newly adopted party [FORCE] . his vindication [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of the english constitution [PERSON] , was published in december [PERIOD] 1835 . it was couched in the form [FORM] of an open letter [PURPOSE] to lyndhurst [UNKNOWN] , and in bradford [PERSON] 's view [PERSON] encapsulates a political philosophy [STATE] that disraeli [PERSON] adhered to for the rest [NUMBER] of his life [EVENT] : the value [VALUE] of benevolent aristocratic government [GOVERNMENT] , a loathing [EVENT] of political dogma [RULE] , and the modernisation [UNKNOWN] of tory policies [RULE] . the following year [PERIOD] he wrote a series [SERIES] of satires [DEVICE] on politicians [PERSON] of the day [PERIOD] , which he published in the times [UNKNOWN] under the pen-name " runnymede [UNKNOWN] " . his targets [EVENT] included the whigs [LIQUID] , collectively and individually , irish [PERSON] nationalists [PERSON] , and political corruption [UNKNOWN] . one essay [PERSON] ended : the english [EVENT] nation [PERSON] , therefore , rallies [INCREASE] for rescue [TOOL] from the degrading plots [RESOURCE] of a profligate [PERSON] oligarchy [PERSON] , a barbarizing sectarianism [EVENT] , and a boroughmongering papacy [EVENT] , round their hereditary leaders [PERSON] — the peers [PERSON] . the house [PLACE] of lords [PERSON] , therefore , at this moment [PERIOD] represents everything [ACTIVITY] in the realm [PLACE] except the whig oligarchs [UNKNOWN] , their tools [TOOL] the dissenters [PERSON] , and their masters [PERSON] the irish [PERSON] priests [PERSON] . in the mean time [PERIOD] , the whigs bawl [INSTANCE] that there is a " collision [EVENT] ! " it is true there is a collision [EVENT] , but it is not a collision [EVENT] between the lords [PERSON] and the people [HUMAN GROUP] , but between the ministers [PERSON] and the constitution [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] was elected to the exclusively tory [PERSON] carlton club [INSTITUTION] in 1836 , and was also taken up by the party [FORCE] 's leading hostess [PERSON] , lady londonderry [PERSON] . in june [PERIOD] 1837 william iv died , the young queen victoria [PLACE] succeeded him , and parliament [HUMAN GROUP] was dissolved . on the recommendation [SUGGESTION] of the carlton club [INSTITUTION] , disraeli [PERSON] was adopted as a tory parliamentary candidate [PERSON] at the ensuing general election [POWER] . parliament [HUMAN GROUP] back-bencher in the election [POWER] in july [PERIOD] 1837 , disraeli [PERSON] won a seat [PROPERTY] in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] as one of two members [PERSON] , both tory [PERSON] , for the constituency [PLACE] of maidstone [UNKNOWN] . the other was wyndham lewis [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] helped finance disraeli [PERSON] 's election campaign [PERSON] , and who [UNKNOWN] died the following year [PERIOD] . in the same year disraeli [PERSON] published a novel [EVENT] , henrietta temple [PERSON] , which was a love story [PERSON] and social comedy [UNKNOWN] , drawing on his affair [PLACE] with henrietta sykes [PERSON] . he had broken off the relationship [RELATIONSHIP] in late [PERIOD] 1836 , distraught that she had taken yet another lover . his other novel [EVENT] of this period [PERIOD] is venetia [PERSON] , a romance [PERSON] based on the characters [FORCE] of shelley [PERSON] and byron [PERSON] , written quickly to raise much-needed money [MONEY] . disraeli [PERSON] made his maiden speech [SPEECH] in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] on 7 december [PERIOD] 1837 . he followed o'connell [UNKNOWN] , whom he sharply criticised for the latter [UNKNOWN] 's " long , rambling , jumbling , speech [SPEECH] " . he was shouted down by o'connell [UNKNOWN] 's supporters [UNKNOWN] . after this unpromising start disraeli [PERSON] kept a low [ABSTRACT ENTITY] profile [EVENT] for the rest [NUMBER] of the parliamentary session [PERIOD] . he was a loyal supporter [PERSON] of the party leader [PERSON] sir robert peel [PERSON] and his policies [RULE] , with the exception [STATEMENT] of a personal sympathy [EVENT] for the chartist movement [HUMAN GROUP] that most tories [UNKNOWN] did not share . a portrait [PERSON] of a young woman [PERSON] with elaborately styled brown hair [HAIR] , tied up with a blue bow mary anne lewis [PERSON] c. 1820-30 in 1839 disraeli [PERSON] married mary anne lewis [PERSON] , the widow [PERSON] of wyndham lewis [PERSON] . twelve years disraeli [PERSON] 's senior [PERSON] , mary lewis [PERSON] had a substantial income [DISEASE] of £5,000 a year [PERIOD] . his motives [POWER] were generally assumed to be mercenary , but the couple [GROUP] came to cherish one another , remaining close until she died more [PLACE] than three decades [UNKNOWN] later . " dizzy [DEVICE] married me for my money [MONEY] " , his wife [PERSON] said later , " but , if he had the chance [PERSON] again , he would marry me for love [PERSON] . " finding the financial demands [EVENT] of his maidstone seat [PROPERTY] too much , disraeli [PERSON] secured a tory [PERSON] nomination [DEVICE] for shrewsbury [PLACE] , winning one of the constituency [PLACE] 's two seats [PROPERTY] at the 1841 general election [POWER] , despite serious opposition [EVENT] , and heavy debts [MONEY] which opponents [PERSON] seized on . the election [POWER] was a massive defeat [BODY] for the whigs [LIQUID] across the country [PLACE] , and peel [PERSON] became prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] . disraeli [PERSON] hoped , unrealistically , for ministerial office [PLACE] . though disappointed at being left [UNKNOWN] on the back benches [ENTITY] , he continued his support [ACT] for peel [PERSON] in 1842 and 1843 , seeking to establish himself as an expert [PERSON] on foreign affairs [PLACE] and international trade [PERSON] . although a tory [PERSON] ( or conservative [PERSON] , as some in the party [FORCE] now called themselves ) disraeli [PERSON] was sympathetic to some of the aims [PERSON] of chartism [CONCEPT] , and argued for an alliance [STATE] between the landed aristocracy [SET] and the working class [UNKNOWN] against the increasing power [POWER] of the merchants [PERSON] and new [PLACE] industrialists [PERSON] in the middle class [UNKNOWN] . after disraeli [PERSON] won widespread acclaim [STATEMENT] in march [PERIOD] 1842 for worsting lord palmerston [UNKNOWN] in debate [STATE] , he was taken up by a small [PERSON] group [GROUP] of idealistic new [PLACE] tory mps [UNKNOWN] , with whom he formed the young england [PLACE] group [GROUP] . they held that the landed interests [ELEMENT] should use [USE] their power [POWER] to protect the poor [UNKNOWN] from exploitation [PERSON] by middle-class businessmen [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] hoped to forge a paternalistic [UNKNOWN] tory-radical alliance [STATE] , but he was unsuccessful . before the reform act [ACT] 1867 , the working class [UNKNOWN] did not possess the vote [EVENT] and therefore had little political power [POWER] . although disraeli [PERSON] forged a personal friendship [RELATIONSHIP] with john bright [PERSON] , a leading radical [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] was unable to persuade bright [PERSON] to sacrifice his distinct position [POSITION] for parliamentary advancement [AMOUNT] . when disraeli [PERSON] attempted to secure [UNKNOWN] a tory-radical cabinet [EVENT] in 1852 , bright [PERSON] refused . four men clockwise [PERSON] from top [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] : bright [PERSON] , peel [PERSON] , bentinck [PERSON] and stanley disraeli [PERSON] gradually became a sharp [PERSON] critic of peel [PERSON] 's government [GOVERNMENT] , often deliberately taking contrary positions [POSITION] . the young mp attacked his leader [PERSON] as early as 1843 . however , the best known of these stances [PROPERTY] were over the maynooth grant [PERSON] in 1845 and the repeal [ACT] of the corn laws [PERSON] in 1846 . the president [PERSON] of the board [NUMBER] of trade [PERSON] , william gladstone [PERSON] , resigned from the cabinet [EVENT] over the maynooth grant [PERSON] . the corn laws [PERSON] imposed a tariff [PERSON] on imported wheat [LIGHT] , protecting british [UNKNOWN] farmers [PERSON] from foreign competition [EVENT] , but making the cost [EVENT] of bread [PERSON] artificially high . peel [PERSON] hoped that the repeal [ACT] of the corn laws [PERSON] and the resultant influx [ACT] of cheaper wheat [LIGHT] into britain [PLACE] would relieve the condition [CONDITION] of the poor [UNKNOWN] , and in particular the great famine [DEFICIENCY] caused by successive failure [STATE] of potato crops [NUMBER] in ireland [PLACE] . the first months [PERIOD] of 1846 were dominated by a battle [PERSON] in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] between the free traders [PERSON] and the protectionists [PERSON] over the repeal [ACT] of the corn laws [PERSON] , with the latter [UNKNOWN] rallying around disraeli [PERSON] and lord george [PERSON] bentinck [PERSON] . an alliance [STATE] of free-trade conservatives [UNKNOWN] ( the " peelites [UNKNOWN] " ) , radicals [PERSON] , and whigs [LIQUID] carried repeal [ACT] , and the conservative party [FORCE] split [PLACE] : the peelites [UNKNOWN] moved towards the whigs [LIQUID] , while a " new [PLACE] " conservative party [FORCE] formed around the protectionists [PERSON] , led by disraeli [PERSON] , bentinck [PERSON] , and lord stanley [PERSON] ( later lord derby [PERSON] ) . the split [PLACE] in the tory party [FORCE] over the repeal [ACT] of the corn laws [PERSON] had profound implications [PERSON] for disraeli [PERSON] 's political career [NUMBER] : almost every tory politician [PERSON] with experience [EFFECT] of office [PLACE] followed peel [PERSON] , leaving the rump bereft [PERSON] of leadership [PERSON] . in blake [PERSON] 's words [WORD] , " found himself almost the only figure [FIGURE] on his side capable [PLACE] of putting up the oratorical display [PERSON] essential for a parliamentary leader [PERSON] . " the duke [PERSON] of argyll [PERSON] wrote that disraeli [PERSON] " was like a subaltern [UNKNOWN] in a great battle [PERSON] where every superior officer [TERM] was killed or wounded " . if the tory party [FORCE] could muster the electoral support [ACT] necessary to form [FORM] a government [GOVERNMENT] , then disraeli [PERSON] now seemed to be guaranteed high office [PLACE] , but with a group [GROUP] of men [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] possessed little or no official experience [EFFECT] and who [UNKNOWN] , as a group [GROUP] , remained personally hostile to disraeli [PERSON] . in the event [EVENT] the tory [PERSON] split [PLACE] soon had the party [FORCE] out of office [PLACE] , not regaining power [POWER] until 1852 . the conservatives [UNKNOWN] would not again have a majority [PROPERTY] in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] until 1874 . bentinck [PERSON] and the leadership peel [PERSON] successfully steered the repeal [ACT] of the corn laws [PERSON] through parliament [HUMAN GROUP] and was then defeated by an alliance [STATE] of his enemies [PERSON] on the issue [EVENT] of irish [PERSON] law [PERSON] and order [GARMENT] ; he resigned in june [PERIOD] 1846 . the tories [UNKNOWN] remained split [PLACE] , and the queen [PERSON] sent for lord john russell [PERSON] , the whig leader [PERSON] . in the 1847 general election [POWER] , disraeli [PERSON] stood , successfully , for the buckinghamshire constituency [PLACE] . the new [PLACE] house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] had more [PLACE] conservative [PERSON] than whig members [PERSON] , but the depth [AMOUNT] of the tory schism [PERSON] enabled russell [PERSON] to continue to govern . the conservatives [UNKNOWN] were led by bentinck [PERSON] in the commons [UNKNOWN] and stanley [PERSON] in the lords [PERSON] . four men clockwise [PERSON] from top [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] : russell [PERSON] , rothschild [PERSON] , manners [PERSON] and granby [PERSON] in 1847 a small [PERSON] political crisis [EVENT] removed bentinck [PERSON] from the leadership [PERSON] and highlighted disraeli [PERSON] 's differences [STATE] with his own party [FORCE] . in that year [PERIOD] 's general election [POWER] , lionel de rothschild [PERSON] had been returned for the city [PLACE] of london [PLACE] . as a practising jew [PERSON] he could not take the oath [ASSET] of allegiance [STATE] in the prescribed [UNKNOWN] christian [PERSON] form [FORM] , and therefore could not take his seat [PROPERTY] . lord john russell [PERSON] , the whig leader [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] had succeeded peel [PERSON] as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] , proposed in the commons [UNKNOWN] that the oath [ASSET] should be amended to permit jews [PERSON] to enter parliament [HUMAN GROUP] . disraeli [PERSON] spoke in favour [PERSON] of the measure [MEASURE] , arguing that christianity [PERSON] was " completed judaism [CONCEPT] " , and asking the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] " where is your christianity [PERSON] if you do not believe in their judaism [CONCEPT] ? " russell [PERSON] and disraeli [PERSON] 's future [VALUE] rival gladstone [PERSON] thought this brave [PERSON] ; the speech [SPEECH] was badly received by his own party [FORCE] . the tories [UNKNOWN] and the anglican establishment [EVENT] were hostile to the bill [PERSON] . with the exception [STATEMENT] of disraeli [PERSON] , every member [PERSON] of the future [VALUE] protectionist cabinet [EVENT] then in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] voted against the measure [MEASURE] . the measure [MEASURE] was voted down . in the aftermath [PLACE] of the debate bentinck [PERSON] resigned the leadership [PERSON] and was succeeded by lord granby [PERSON] ; disraeli [PERSON] 's speech [SPEECH] , thought by many of his own party [FORCE] to be blasphemous , ruled him out for the time being [UNKNOWN] . while these intrigues [UNKNOWN] played out , disraeli [PERSON] was working with the bentinck family [HUMAN GROUP] to secure [UNKNOWN] the necessary financing [QUANTITY] to purchase [AMOUNT] hughenden manor [PERSON] , in buckinghamshire [PLACE] . the possession [STATE] of a country [PLACE] house [PLACE] and incumbency [ACT] of a county constituency [PLACE] were regarded as essential for a tory [PERSON] with leadership ambitions [EVENT] . disraeli [PERSON] and his wife [PERSON] alternated between hughenden [UNKNOWN] and several homes [PERSON] in london [PLACE] for the rest [NUMBER] of their marriage [EVENT] . the negotiations [PROCESS] were complicated by bentinck [PERSON] 's sudden death [EVENT] on 21 september [PERIOD] 1848 , but disraeli [PERSON] obtained a loan [PERSON] of £25,000 from bentinck [PERSON] 's brothers lord henry [PERSON] bentinck [PERSON] and lord titchfield [PERSON] . within a month [PERIOD] of his appointment granby [PERSON] resigned the leadership [PERSON] in the commons [UNKNOWN] and the party [FORCE] functioned without a leader [PERSON] in the commons [UNKNOWN] for the rest [NUMBER] of the session [PERIOD] . at the start [UNKNOWN] of the next session [PERIOD] , affairs [PLACE] were handled by a triumvirate [UNKNOWN] of granby [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] , and john charles [PERSON] herries— indicative of the tension [EMOTION] between disraeli [PERSON] and the rest [NUMBER] of the party [FORCE] , who [UNKNOWN] needed his talents [EVENT] but mistrusted him . this confused arrangement [ARRANGEMENT] ended with granby [PERSON] 's resignation [EVENT] in 1851 ; disraeli [PERSON] effectively ignored the two men [PERSON] regardless . chancellor [PERSON] of the exchequer first derby government [GOVERNMENT] main article [ARTICLE] : who [UNKNOWN] ? who [UNKNOWN] ? ministry [INSTITUTION] a stately-looking gentleman [PERSON] in a dark [CONDITION] suit [TENDENCY] , sitting with a book [ENTITY] the earl [PERSON] of derby [PERSON] , prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] 1852 , 1858-59 , 1866-68 in march [PERIOD] 1851 , lord john russell [PERSON] 's government [GOVERNMENT] was defeated over a bill [PERSON] to equalise the county [PLACE] and borough franchises [PERMISSION] , mostly because of divisions [PERSON] among his supporters [UNKNOWN] . he resigned , and the queen [PERSON] sent for stanley [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] felt that a minority government [GOVERNMENT] could do little and would not last [UNKNOWN] long , so russell [PERSON] remained in office [PLACE] . disraeli [PERSON] regretted this , hoping for an opportunity [OPPORTUNITY] , however brief , to show himself capable in office [PLACE] . stanley [PERSON] , in contrast [RESULT] , deprecated his inexperienced followers [METAL] as a reason [EVENT] for not assuming office [PLACE] : " these are not names [NAME] i can put before the queen [PERSON] . " at the end [UNKNOWN] of june [PERIOD] 1851 , stanley [PERSON] succeeded to the title [ACTION] of earl [PERSON] of derby [PERSON] . the whigs [LIQUID] were wracked by internal dissensions [CONDITION] during the second [PERSON] half [PLACE] of 1851 , much of which parliament [HUMAN GROUP] spent in recess [ACT] . russell [PERSON] dismissed lord palmerston [UNKNOWN] from the cabinet [EVENT] , leaving the latter [UNKNOWN] determined to deprive the prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] of office [PLACE] . palmerston [UNKNOWN] did so within weeks [PERIOD] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] 's reassembly on 4 february [PERIOD] 1852 , his followers [METAL] combining with disraeli [PERSON] 's tories [UNKNOWN] to defeat [BODY] the government [GOVERNMENT] on a militia bill [PERSON] , and russell [PERSON] resigned . derby [PERSON] had either to take office [PLACE] or risk [STATEMENT] damage [EVENT] to his reputation [REPUTATION] , and he accepted the queen [PERSON] 's commission [INSTANCE] as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] . palmerston [UNKNOWN] declined any office [PLACE] ; derby [PERSON] had hoped to have him as chancellor [PERSON] of the exchequer [AMOUNT] . disraeli [PERSON] , his closest [UNKNOWN] ally , was his second [PERSON] choice [EVENT] and accepted , though disclaiming any great knowledge [STATE] in the financial field [BALL] . gladstone [PERSON] refused to join the government [GOVERNMENT] . disraeli [PERSON] may [PERIOD] have been attracted to the office [PLACE] by the £5,000 annual salary [AMOUNT] , which would help [UNKNOWN] pay his debts [MONEY] . few [UNKNOWN] of the new [PLACE] cabinet [EVENT] had held office [PLACE] before ; when derby [PERSON] tried to inform the duke [PERSON] of wellington [PLACE] of the names [NAME] of the ministers [PERSON] , the old duke [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] was somewhat deaf [UNKNOWN] , inadvertently branded the new [PLACE] government [GOVERNMENT] by incredulously repeating " who [UNKNOWN] ? who [UNKNOWN] ? " in the following weeks [PERIOD] , disraeli [PERSON] served as leader [PERSON] of the house [PLACE] ( with derby [PERSON] as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] in the lords [PERSON] ) and as chancellor [PERSON] . he wrote regular reports [SYMBOL] on proceedings [ACTION] in the commons [UNKNOWN] to victoria [PLACE] , who [UNKNOWN] described them as " very curious " and " much in the style [STYLE] of his books [ENTITY] " . parliament [HUMAN GROUP] was prorogued on 1 july [PERIOD] 1852 as the tories [UNKNOWN] could not govern for long as a minority [GROUP] ; disraeli [PERSON] hoped that they would gain a majority [PROPERTY] of about 40 . instead , the election [POWER] later that month [PERIOD] had no clear winner [PERSON] , and the derby government [GOVERNMENT] held to power [POWER] pending the meeting [ACTIVITY] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] . budget disraeli [PERSON] 's task [AMOUNT] as chancellor [PERSON] was to devise a budget [DOCUMENT PART] which would satisfy the protectionist elements [ELEMENT] who [UNKNOWN] supported the tories [UNKNOWN] , without uniting the free-traders against it . his proposed budget [DOCUMENT PART] , which he presented to the commons [UNKNOWN] on 3 december [PERIOD] , lowered the taxes [UNKNOWN] on malt [BEVERAGE] and tea [PERSON] , provisions [UNKNOWN] designed to appeal to the working class [UNKNOWN] . to make his budget [DOCUMENT PART] revenue-neutral , as funds [QUANTITY] were needed to provide defences [PERSON] against the french [PLACE] , he doubled the house tax [PLACE] and continued the income [DISEASE] tax [PLACE] . disraeli [PERSON] 's overall [GARMENT] purpose [PURPOSE] was to enact policies [RULE] which would benefit the working classes [UNKNOWN] , making his party [FORCE] more [PLACE] attractive to them . although the budget [DOCUMENT PART] did not contain protectionist features [ARTIFACT] , the opposition [EVENT] was prepared to destroy it— and disraeli [PERSON] 's career [NUMBER] as chancellor—in part [PART] out of revenge [FORM] for his actions [ACTION] against peel [PERSON] in 1846 . mp sidney herbert predicted that the budget [DOCUMENT PART] would fail because " jews [PERSON] make no converts [ABSTRACT ENTITY] " . a middle-aged man [PERSON] in victorian clothes [EVENT] gladstone [PERSON] in the 1850s disraeli [PERSON] delivered the budget [DOCUMENT PART] on 3 december [PERIOD] 1852 , and prepared to wind up the debate [STATE] for the government [GOVERNMENT] on 16 december—it [UNKNOWN] was customary for the chancellor [PERSON] to have the last [UNKNOWN] word [WORD] . a massive defeat [BODY] for the government [GOVERNMENT] was predicted . disraeli [PERSON] attacked his opponents [PERSON] individually , and then as a force [FORCE] : " i face [PORTION] a coalition [GROUP] ... this , too , i know , that england [PLACE] does not love [PERSON] coalitions [GROUP] . " his speech [SPEECH] of three hours [PERIOD] was quickly seen as a parliamentary masterpiece [UNKNOWN] . as mps [UNKNOWN] prepared to divide , gladstone [PERSON] rose to his feet [FOOT] and began an angry speech [SPEECH] , despite the efforts [ACTION] of tory mps [UNKNOWN] to shout him down . the interruptions [PERSON] were fewer , as gladstone [PERSON] gained control [GROUP] of the house [PLACE] , and in the next two hours [PERIOD] painted a picture [PICTURE] of disraeli [PERSON] as frivolous and his budget [DOCUMENT PART] as subversive . the government [GOVERNMENT] was defeated by 19 votes [EVENT] , and derby [PERSON] resigned four days [PERIOD] later . he was replaced by the peelite earl [PERSON] of aberdeen [PERSON] , with gladstone [PERSON] as his chancellor [PERSON] . because of disraeli [PERSON] 's unpopularity [PROPERTY] among the peelites [UNKNOWN] , no party reconciliation [UNKNOWN] was possible while he remained tory leader [PERSON] in the commons [UNKNOWN] . opposition [EVENT] with the fall [PERSON] of the government [GOVERNMENT] , disraeli [PERSON] and the conservatives [UNKNOWN] returned to the opposition benches [ENTITY] . disraeli [PERSON] would spend three-quarters of his 44-year parliamentary career [NUMBER] in opposition [EVENT] . derby [PERSON] was reluctant to seek to unseat the government [GOVERNMENT] , fearing a repetition [ACT] of the who [UNKNOWN] ? who [UNKNOWN] ? ministry [INSTITUTION] and knowing that shared dislike of disraeli [PERSON] was part of what had formed the governing coalition [GROUP] . disraeli [PERSON] , on the other hand [PERSON] , was anxious to return [STATEMENT] to office [PLACE] . in the interim [UNKNOWN] , disraeli [PERSON] , as conservative [PERSON] leader [PERSON] in the commons [UNKNOWN] , opposed the government [GOVERNMENT] on all major measures [MEASURE] . in june [PERIOD] 1853 disraeli [PERSON] was awarded an honorary degree [PROCESS] by the university [INSTITUTION] of oxford [INSTITUTION] . he had been recommended for it by lord derby [PERSON] , the university [INSTITUTION] 's chancellor [PERSON] . the start [UNKNOWN] of the crimean war [EVENT] in 1854 caused a lull [PERIOD] in party politics [ACTION] ; disraeli [PERSON] spoke patriotically in support [ACT] . the british [UNKNOWN] military efforts [ACTION] were marked by bungling , and in 1855 a restive parliament [HUMAN GROUP] considered a resolution [EVENT] to establish a committee [HUMAN GROUP] on the conduct [ACT] of the war [EVENT] . the aberdeen government [GOVERNMENT] made this a motion [REQUEST] of confidence [EMOTION] ; disraeli [PERSON] led the opposition [EVENT] to defeat [BODY] the government [GOVERNMENT] , 305 to 148 . aberdeen [PERSON] resigned , and the queen [PERSON] sent for derby [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] to disraeli [PERSON] 's frustration [PERSON] refused to take office [PLACE] . palmerston [UNKNOWN] was deemed essential to any whig ministry [INSTITUTION] , and he would not join any he did not head [HEAD] . the queen [PERSON] reluctantly asked palmerston [UNKNOWN] to form [FORM] a government [GOVERNMENT] . under palmerston [UNKNOWN] , the war [EVENT] went better , and was ended by the treaty [ARTIFACT] of paris [PLACE] in early 1856 . disraeli [PERSON] was early to call for peace [EVENT] but had little influence [POWER] on events [PLACE] . when a rebellion [FORCE] broke out in india [PLACE] in 1857 , disraeli [PERSON] took a keen interest [ELEMENT] , having been a member [PERSON] of a select committee [HUMAN GROUP] in 1852 which considered how best to rule [RULE] the subcontinent [PLACE] , and had proposed eliminating the governing role [ROLE] of the british east india [PLACE] company [INSTITUTION] . after peace [EVENT] was restored , and palmerston [UNKNOWN] in early 1858 brought in legislation [PERSON] for direct rule [RULE] of india [PLACE] by the crown [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] opposed it . many conservative [PERSON] mps [UNKNOWN] refused to follow him , and the bill [PERSON] passed the commons [UNKNOWN] easily . palmerston [UNKNOWN] 's grip [PERSON] on the premiership [POSITION] was weakened by his response [ACT] to the orsini affair [PLACE] , in which an attempt [ACTION] was made to assassinate the french emperor [PERSON] napoleon iii [PERSON] by an italian revolutionary [PERSON] with a bomb [BOMB] made in birmingham [PLACE] . at the request [REQUEST] of the french [PLACE] ambassador [ENTITY] , palmerston [UNKNOWN] proposed amending the conspiracy [DOCUMENT PART] to murder statute [PERSON] to make creating an infernal device [DEVICE] a felony [PERSON] . he was defeated by 19 votes [EVENT] on the second [PERSON] reading [PROPERTY] , with many liberals [PERSON] crossing the aisle [PLACE] against him . he immediately resigned , and lord derby [PERSON] returned to office [PLACE] . second [PERSON] derby government [GOVERNMENT] main article [ARTICLE] : second [PERSON] derby-disraeli ministry [INSTITUTION] derby [PERSON] took office [PLACE] at the head [HEAD] of a purely [UNKNOWN] " conservative [PERSON] " administration [PLACE] , not in coalition [GROUP] . he again offered a place [PLACE] to gladstone [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] declined . disraeli [PERSON] was once more [PLACE] leader [PERSON] of the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] and returned to the exchequer [AMOUNT] . as in 1852 , derby [PERSON] led a minority government [GOVERNMENT] , dependent [RESULT] on the division [PERSON] of its opponents [PERSON] for survival [FORM] . as leader [PERSON] of the house [PLACE] , disraeli [PERSON] resumed his regular reports [SYMBOL] to queen victoria [PLACE] , who [UNKNOWN] had requested that he include what she " could not meet in newspapers [UNKNOWN] " . during its brief life [EVENT] of just over a year [PERIOD] , the derby government [GOVERNMENT] proved moderately progressive . the government [GOVERNMENT] of india act [ACT] 1858 ended the role [ROLE] of the east india [PLACE] company [INSTITUTION] in governing the subcontinent [PLACE] . the thames purification bill [PERSON] funded the construction [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of much larger sewers [EVENT] for london [PLACE] . disraeli [PERSON] had supported efforts [ACTION] to allow jews [PERSON] to sit in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] with a bill [PERSON] passed through the commons [UNKNOWN] allowing each house [PLACE] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] to determine what oaths its members [PERSON] should take . this was grudgingly agreed to by the house [PLACE] of lords [PERSON] , with a minority [GROUP] of conservatives [UNKNOWN] joining with the opposition [EVENT] to pass it . in 1858 , baron lionel de rothschild [PERSON] [PERSON] became the first mp to profess the jewish [UNKNOWN] faith [PERSON] . faced with a vacancy [QUANTITY] , disraeli [PERSON] and derby [PERSON] tried yet again to bring gladstone [PERSON] , still nominally a conservative [PERSON] mp , into the government [GOVERNMENT] , hoping to strengthen it . disraeli [PERSON] wrote a personal letter [PURPOSE] to gladstone [PERSON] , asking him to place [PLACE] the good [UNKNOWN] of the party [FORCE] above personal animosity [PROPERTY] : " every man [PERSON] performs his office [PLACE] , and there is a power [POWER] , greater than ourselves [UNKNOWN] , that disposes [PERSON] of all this . " in response [ACT] , gladstone [PERSON] denied that personal feelings [ACTIVITY] played any role [ROLE] in his decisions [DECISION] then and previously whether to accept office [PLACE] , while acknowledging that there were differences [STATE] between him and derby [PERSON] " broader than you may [PERIOD] have supposed " . the tories [UNKNOWN] pursued a reform bill [PERSON] in 1859 , which would have resulted in a modest increase [INCREASE] to the franchise [PERMISSION] . the liberals [PERSON] were healing the breaches [AMOUNT] between those who [UNKNOWN] favoured russell [PERSON] and the palmerston loyalists [PERSON] , and in late [PERIOD] march [PERIOD] 1859 , the government [GOVERNMENT] was defeated on a russell-sponsored amendment [EVENT] . derby [PERSON] dissolved parliament [HUMAN GROUP] , and the ensuing general election [POWER] resulted in modest tory gains [PERSON] , but not enough to control [GROUP] the commons [UNKNOWN] . when parliament [HUMAN GROUP] assembled , derby [PERSON] 's government [GOVERNMENT] was defeated by 13 votes [EVENT] on an amendment [EVENT] to the address [UNKNOWN] from the throne [EVENT] . he resigned , and the queen [PERSON] reluctantly sent for palmerston [UNKNOWN] again . opposition [EVENT] and third term [TERM] as chancellor main article [ARTICLE] : third derby-disraeli ministry [INSTITUTION] after derby [PERSON] 's second [PERSON] ejection [EVENT] from office [PLACE] , disraeli [PERSON] faced dissension [CONDITION] within conservative [PERSON] ranks [RANK] from those who [UNKNOWN] blamed him for the defeat [BODY] , or who [UNKNOWN] felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] warned disraeli [PERSON] of some mps [UNKNOWN] seeking his removal [ACT] from the front bench [ENTITY] . among the conspirators [PERSON] were lord robert cecil [PERSON] [PERSON] , a conservative [PERSON] mp who [UNKNOWN] would a quarter century [PERIOD] later become prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] as lord salisbury [PERSON] ; he wrote that having disraeli [PERSON] as leader [PERSON] in the commons [UNKNOWN] decreased the conservatives [UNKNOWN] ' chance [PERSON] of holding office [PLACE] . when cecil [PERSON] 's father [PERSON] objected , lord robert [PERSON] stated , " i have merely put into print [SPEECH ACT] what all the country [PLACE] gentlemen [PLACE] were saying in private [PERSON] . " a young man [PERSON] with dark [CONDITION] hair [HAIR] and huge [UNKNOWN] sideburns lord robert cecil [PERSON] [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] 's fierce opponent [PERSON] in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli [PERSON] led a toothless opposition [EVENT] in the commons—seeing [UNKNOWN] no way [UNKNOWN] of unseating palmerston [UNKNOWN] , derby [PERSON] privately agreed not to seek the government [GOVERNMENT] 's defeat [BODY] . disraeli [PERSON] kept himself informed on foreign affairs [PLACE] , and on what was going on in cabinet [EVENT] , thanks to a source [RANK] within it . when the american civil war [EVENT] began in 1861 , disraeli [PERSON] said little publicly , but like most englishmen [UNKNOWN] expected the south [PLACE] to win . less reticent [UNKNOWN] were palmerston [UNKNOWN] , gladstone [PERSON] , and russell [PERSON] , whose statements [STATEMENT] in support [ACT] of the south [PLACE] contributed to years [PERIOD] of hard feelings [ACTIVITY] in the united states [PLACE] . in 1862 , disraeli [PERSON] met prussian count otto von bismarck [FOOD] and said of him , " be careful about that man [PERSON] , he means what he says " . the party truce [AGREEMENT] ended in 1864 , with tories [UNKNOWN] outraged over palmerston [UNKNOWN] 's handling [AMOUNT] of the territorial dispute [DISPUTE] between the german confederation [STATE] and denmark [PLACE] known as the schleswig-holstein question [QUESTION] . disraeli [PERSON] had little help [UNKNOWN] from derby [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] was ill [PERSON] , but he united the party [FORCE] enough on a no-confidence vote [EVENT] to limit the government [GOVERNMENT] to a majority [PROPERTY] of 18— tory defections [PERSON] and absentees [EVENT] kept palmerston [UNKNOWN] in office [PLACE] . despite rumours [STATEMENT] about palmerston [UNKNOWN] 's health [PROPERTY] as he turned 80 , he remained personally popular , and the liberals [PERSON] increased their margin [GROUP] in the july [PERIOD] 1865 general election [POWER] . in the wake [PLACE] of the poor [UNKNOWN] election results [RESULT] , derby [PERSON] predicted to disraeli [PERSON] that neither of them would ever hold office [PLACE] again . political plans [UNKNOWN] were thrown into disarray [DEFICIENCY] by palmerston [UNKNOWN] 's death [EVENT] on 18 october [PERIOD] 1865 . russell [PERSON] became prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] again , with gladstone [PERSON] clearly the liberal party [FORCE] 's leader-in-waiting , and as leader [PERSON] of the house disraeli [PERSON] 's direct opponent [PERSON] . one of russell [PERSON] 's early priorities [PERSON] was a reform bill [PERSON] , but the proposed legislation [PERSON] that gladstone [PERSON] announced on 12 march [PERIOD] 1866 divided his party [FORCE] . the conservatives [UNKNOWN] and the dissident liberals [PERSON] repeatedly attacked gladstone [PERSON] 's bill [PERSON] , and in june [PERIOD] finally defeated the government [GOVERNMENT] ; russell [PERSON] resigned on 26 june [PERIOD] . the dissidents [PERSON] were unwilling to serve under disraeli [PERSON] in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] , and derby [PERSON] formed a third conservative [PERSON] minority government [GOVERNMENT] , with disraeli [PERSON] again as chancellor [PERSON] . tory democrat [PERSON] : the 1867 reform act [ACT] it was disraeli [PERSON] 's belief [TRUST] that if given the vote british [UNKNOWN] people [HUMAN GROUP] would use [USE] it instinctively to put their natural and traditional [UNKNOWN] rulers [PLACE] , the gentlemen [PLACE] of the conservative party [FORCE] , into power [POWER] . responding to renewed agitation [PROPERTY] for popular suffrage [CONCLUSION] , disraeli [PERSON] persuaded a majority [PROPERTY] of the cabinet [EVENT] to agree to a reform bill [PERSON] . with what derby [PERSON] cautioned was " a leap [PERSON] in the dark [CONDITION] " , disraeli [PERSON] had outflanked the liberals [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] , as the supposed champions [PERSON] of reform [AMOUNT] , dared not oppose him . in the absence [ABSENCE] of a credible party rival [PERSON] and for fear [EMOTION] of having an election [POWER] called on the issue [EVENT] , conservatives [UNKNOWN] felt obliged to support [ACT] disraeli [PERSON] despite their misgivings [POSITION] . there were tory [PERSON] dissenters [PERSON] , most notably lord cranborne [UNKNOWN] ( as robert cecil [PERSON] was by then known ) who [UNKNOWN] resigned from the government [GOVERNMENT] and spoke against the bill [PERSON] , accusing disraeli [PERSON] of " a political betrayal [ACT] which has no parallel [PROPOSITION] in our parliamentary annals [UNKNOWN] " . even as disraeli [PERSON] accepted liberal amendments [EVENT] ( although pointedly refusing those moved by gladstone [PERSON] ) that further lowered the property qualification [DOCUMENT] , cranborne [UNKNOWN] was unable to lead an effective rebellion [FORCE] . disraeli [PERSON] gained wide acclaim [STATEMENT] and became a hero [PERSON] to his party [FORCE] for the " marvellous parliamentary skill [SKILL] " with which he secured the passage [EVENT] of reform [AMOUNT] in the commons [UNKNOWN] . from the liberal [PERSON] benches too there was admiration [EVENT] . mp for nottingham bernal ostborne [PERSON] declared : i have always thought the chancellor [PERSON] of exchequer [AMOUNT] was the greatest radical [PERSON] in the house [PLACE] . he has achieved what no other man [PERSON] in the country [PLACE] could have done . he has lugged up that great omnibus full of stupid , heavy , country [PLACE] gentlemen--i only say ' stupid ' in the parliamentary sense--and has converted these conservative [PERSON] into radical reformers [PERSON] . the reform act [ACT] 1867 passed that august [PERIOD] . it extended the franchise [PERMISSION] by 938,427 men—an increase [INCREASE] of 88% —by giving the vote [EVENT] to male householders [PERSON] and male lodgers [PERSON] paying at least £10 for rooms [ROOM] . it eliminated rotten boroughs [ESTATE] with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants [PLACE] , and granted constituencies [PLACE] to 15 unrepresented towns [ENTITY] , with extra representation [ACT] to large municipalities [EVENT] such as liverpool [PLACE] and manchester [PLACE] . prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] ( 1868 ) first term main articles [ARTICLE] : first premiership [POSITION] of benjamin disraeli [PERSON] and first disraeli [PERSON] ministry [INSTITUTION] derby [PERSON] had long had attacks [EVENT] of gout [CONDITION] which left [UNKNOWN] him bedbound [UNKNOWN] , unable to deal [SITUATION] with politics [ACTION] . as the new [PLACE] session [PERIOD] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] approached in february [PERIOD] 1868 , he was unable to leave his home [PLACE] but was reluctant to resign , as at 68 he was much younger than either palmerston [UNKNOWN] or russell [PERSON] at the end [UNKNOWN] of their premierships [POSITION] . derby [PERSON] knew that his " attacks [EVENT] of illness [ILLNESS] would , at no distant period [PERIOD] , incapacitate me from the discharge [AMOUNT] of my public [UNKNOWN] duties [ATTITUDE] " ; doctors [RESOURCE] had warned him that his health [PROPERTY] required his resignation [EVENT] . in late [PERIOD] february [PERIOD] , with parliament [HUMAN GROUP] in session [PERIOD] and derby [PERSON] absent [UNKNOWN] , he wrote to disraeli [PERSON] asking for confirmation [ACTION] that " you will not shrink from the additional heavy responsibility [RESPONSIBILITY] " . reassured [UNKNOWN] , he wrote to the queen [PERSON] , resigning and recommending disraeli [PERSON] as " only he could command the cordial support [ACT] , en masse [UNKNOWN] , of his present colleagues [PERSON] " . disraeli [PERSON] went to osborne house [PLACE] on the isle [PLACE] of wight [EVENT] , where the queen [PERSON] asked him to form [FORM] a government [GOVERNMENT] . the monarch [PERSON] wrote to her daughter [PERSON] , prussian crown [PERSON] princess victoria [PLACE] , " mr . disraeli [PERSON] is prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] ! a proud thing [ENTITY] for a man [PERSON] 'risen from the people [HUMAN GROUP] ' to have obtained ! " the new [PLACE] prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] told those who [UNKNOWN] came to congratulate him , " i have climbed to the top [PERSON] of the greasy pole [PERSON] . " first government [GOVERNMENT] , february-december 1868 four men [PERSON] , the second [PERSON] of whom wears a wig [HEAD] resembling that of a judge [PERSON] , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise [PERSON] from top [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] : chelmsford [PERSON] , cairns [PERSON] , hunt [PERSON] and manning the conservatives [UNKNOWN] remained a minority [GROUP] in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] and the passage [EVENT] of the reform bill [PERSON] required the calling [PERSON] of a new [PLACE] election [POWER] once the new [PLACE] voting register [UNIT] had been compiled . disraeli [PERSON] 's term [TERM] as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] , which began in february [PERIOD] 1868 , would therefore be short [PERMISSION] unless the conservatives [UNKNOWN] won the general election [POWER] . he made only two major changes [UNKNOWN] in the cabinet [EVENT] : he replaced lord chelmsford [PERSON] as lord chancellor [PERSON] with lord cairns [PERSON] and brought in george ward hunt [PERSON] as chancellor [PERSON] of the exchequer [AMOUNT] . derby [PERSON] had intended to replace chelmsford [PERSON] once a vacancy [QUANTITY] in a suitable sinecure [POSITION] developed . disraeli [PERSON] was unwilling to wait , and cairns [PERSON] , in his view [PERSON] , was a far [UNKNOWN] stronger minister [HUMAN ROLE] . disraeli [PERSON] 's first premiership [POSITION] was dominated by the heated debate [STATE] over the church [PERSON] of ireland [PLACE] . although ireland [PLACE] was largely roman catholic [PERSON] , the church [PERSON] of england [PLACE] represented most landowners [PERSON] . it remained the established church [PERSON] and was funded by direct taxation [MONEY] , which was greatly resented by the catholics [UNKNOWN] and presbyterians [UNKNOWN] . an initial attempt [ACTION] by disraeli [PERSON] to negotiate with archbishop [PERSON] manning the establishment [EVENT] of a catholic [PERSON] university [INSTITUTION] in dublin [PLACE] foundered in march [PERIOD] when gladstone [PERSON] moved resolutions [EVENT] to disestablish the irish church [PERSON] altogether . the proposal [ABSTRACT ENTITY] united the liberals [PERSON] under gladstone [PERSON] 's leadership [PERSON] , while causing divisions [PERSON] among the conservatives [UNKNOWN] . the conservatives [UNKNOWN] remained in office [PLACE] because the new [PLACE] electoral register [UNIT] was not yet ready ; neither party [FORCE] wished a poll [PERSON] under the old roll [PERSON] . gladstone [PERSON] began using the liberal [PERSON] majority [PROPERTY] in the commons [UNKNOWN] to push through resolutions [EVENT] and legislation [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] 's government [GOVERNMENT] survived until the december general election [POWER] [POWER] , at which the liberals [PERSON] were returned to power [POWER] with a majority [PROPERTY] . in its short [PERMISSION] life [EVENT] , the first disraeli government [GOVERNMENT] passed noncontroversial laws [PERSON] . it ended public [UNKNOWN] executions [CONDITION] , and the corrupt practices act [ACT] did much to end [UNKNOWN] electoral bribery [EVENT] . it authorised an early version [PERMISSION] of nationalisation [ACT] , having the post office [PLACE] buy up the telegraph companies [UNKNOWN] . amendments [EVENT] to the school law [PERSON] , the scottish legal system [SYSTEM] , and the railway laws [PERSON] were passed . in addition [PERSON] , the public health [PROPERTY] ( scotland [PLACE] ) act [ACT] instituted sanitary inspectors [PERSON] and medical officers [TERM] . according to one study [STUDY] , " better sanitation [PLACE] was enforced throughout scotland [PLACE] . " disraeli [PERSON] sent the successful expedition [ACT] against tewodros [PERSON] ii of ethiopia [PLACE] under sir robert napier [PERSON] . opposition leader [PERSON] ; 1874 election [POWER] disraeli [PERSON] circa 1870 given gladstone [PERSON] 's majority [PROPERTY] in the commons [UNKNOWN] , disraeli [PERSON] could do little but protest [GROUP] as the government [GOVERNMENT] advanced legislation [PERSON] ; he chose to await liberal [PERSON] mistakes [EVENT] . he used this leisure time [PERIOD] to write a new [PLACE] novel [EVENT] , lothair [PERSON] ( 1870 ) . a work [ACTIVITY] of fiction [STATEMENT] by a former prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] was a novelty [EVENT] for britain [PLACE] , and the book [ENTITY] became a bestseller [COLLECTION] . by 1872 there was dissent in the conservative [PERSON] ranks [RANK] over the failure [STATE] to challenge [ACTION] gladstone [PERSON] . this was quieted as disraeli [PERSON] took steps [NAME] to assert his leadership [PERSON] , and as divisions [PERSON] among the liberals [PERSON] became clear . public [UNKNOWN] support [ACT] for disraeli [PERSON] was shown by cheering at a thanksgiving service [INSTITUTION] in 1872 on the recovery [DECISION] of the prince [PERSON] of wales [PLACE] from illness [ILLNESS] , while gladstone [PERSON] was met with silence [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] had supported the efforts [ACTION] of party manager john eldon gorst [PERSON] to put the administration [PLACE] of the conservative party [FORCE] on a modern basis [RESULT] . on gorst [PERSON] 's advice [DECISION] , disraeli [PERSON] gave a speech [SPEECH] to a mass [QUANTITY] meeting [ACTIVITY] in manchester [PLACE] that year [PERIOD] . to roaring approval [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , he compared the liberal [PERSON] front bench [ENTITY] to " a range [PARTICLE] of exhausted volcanoes... but the situation [SITUATION] is still dangerous . there are occasional earthquakes [OCCURRENCE] and ever and again the dark [CONDITION] rumbling of the sea [PLACE] . " gladstone [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] stated , dominated the scene [SET] and " alternated between a menace [PERSON] and a sigh [PERSON] " . at his first departure [EVENT] from 10 downing street [PLACE] in 1868 , disraeli [PERSON] had victoria [PLACE] make his wife mary anne viscountess [PERSON] beaconsfield [PLACE] in her own right [UNKNOWN] in lieu [PERSON] of a peerage [COLLECTION] for himself . through 1872 the eighty-year-old peeress [UNKNOWN] had stomach cancer [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . she died on 15 december [PERIOD] . urged by a clergyman [DEVICE] to turn her thoughts [AMOUNT] to jesus christ [PERSON] in her final days [PERIOD] , she said she could not : " you know dizzy [DEVICE] is my j.c. " in 1873 , gladstone [PERSON] brought forward legislation [PERSON] to establish a catholic [PERSON] university [INSTITUTION] in dublin [PLACE] . this divided the liberals [PERSON] , and on 12 march [PERIOD] an alliance [STATE] of conservatives [UNKNOWN] and irish catholics [UNKNOWN] defeated the government [GOVERNMENT] by three votes [EVENT] . gladstone [PERSON] resigned , and the queen [PERSON] sent for disraeli [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] refused to take office [PLACE] . without a general election [POWER] , a conservative [PERSON] government [GOVERNMENT] would be another minority [GROUP] ; disraeli [PERSON] wanted the power [POWER] a majority [PROPERTY] would bring and felt he could gain it later by leaving the liberals [PERSON] in office [PLACE] now . gladstone [PERSON] 's government [GOVERNMENT] struggled on , beset by scandal and unimproved by a reshuffle [INSTANCE] . as part of that change [UNKNOWN] , gladstone [PERSON] took on the office [PLACE] of chancellor [PERSON] , leading to questions [QUESTION] as to whether he had to stand for re-election on taking on a second [PERSON] ministry— until the 1920s , mps [UNKNOWN] becoming ministers [PERSON] had to seek re-election . in january [PERIOD] 1874 , gladstone [PERSON] called a general election [POWER] , convinced that if he waited longer , he would do worse at the polls [CONCLUSION] . balloting was spread over two weeks [PERIOD] , beginning on 1 february [PERIOD] . as the constituencies [PLACE] voted , it became clear that the result [RESULT] would be a conservative [PERSON] majority [PROPERTY] , the first since 1841 . in scotland [PLACE] , where the conservatives [UNKNOWN] were perennially weak , they increased from seven seats [PROPERTY] to nineteen . overall [GARMENT] , they won 350 seats [PROPERTY] to 245 for the liberals [PERSON] and 57 for the irish home [PLACE] rule [RULE] league [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] became prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] for the second [PERSON] time [PERIOD] . prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] ( 1874-1880 ) second [PERSON] term main articles [ARTICLE] : second [PERSON] premiership [POSITION] of benjamin disraeli [PERSON] and second disraeli [PERSON] ministry [INSTITUTION] two gentlemen [PLACE] , the second [PERSON] bearded derby [PERSON] ( top [PERSON] ) and northcote disraeli [PERSON] 's cabinet [EVENT] of twelve , with six peers [PERSON] and six commoners [PERSON] , was the smallest [PERSON] since reform [AMOUNT] . of the peers [PERSON] , five of them had been in disraeli [PERSON] 's 1868 cabinet [EVENT] ; the sixth [RESULT] , lord salisbury [PERSON] , was reconciled to disraeli [PERSON] after negotiation [PROCESS] and became secretary [PERSON] of state [STATE] for india [PLACE] . lord stanley [PERSON] ( who [UNKNOWN] had succeeded his father [PERSON] , the former prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] , as earl [PERSON] of derby [PERSON] ) became foreign secretary [PERSON] and sir stafford northcote [PERSON] the chancellor [PERSON] . in august [PERIOD] 1876 , disraeli [PERSON] was elevated to the house [PLACE] of lords [PERSON] as earl [PERSON] of beaconsfield [PLACE] and viscount hughenden [UNKNOWN] . the queen [PERSON] had offered to ennoble him as early as 1868 ; he had then declined . she did so again in 1874 , when he fell ill [PERSON] at balmoral [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , but he was reluctant to leave the commons [UNKNOWN] for a house [PLACE] in which he had no experience [EFFECT] . continued ill [PERSON] health [PROPERTY] during his second [PERSON] premiership [POSITION] caused him to contemplate resignation [EVENT] , but his lieutenant [PERSON] , derby [PERSON] , was unwilling , feeling that he could not manage the queen [PERSON] . for disraeli [PERSON] , the lords [PERSON] , where the debate [STATE] was less intense , was the alternative [EVENT] to resignation [EVENT] . five days [PERIOD] before the end [UNKNOWN] of the 1876 session [PERIOD] of parliament [HUMAN GROUP] , on 11 august [PERIOD] , disraeli [PERSON] was seen to linger [PERSON] and look around the chamber [PERSON] before departing . newspapers [UNKNOWN] reported his ennoblement [UNKNOWN] the following morning [PERSON] . in addition [PERSON] to the viscounty [UNKNOWN] bestowed on mary anne disraeli [PERSON] , the earldom [UNKNOWN] of beaconsfield [PLACE] was to have been bestowed on edmund burke [PERSON] in 1797 , but he had died before receiving it . the name beaconsfield [PLACE] , a town [PLACE] near hughenden [UNKNOWN] , was given to a minor character [FORCE] in vivian grey [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] made various statements [STATEMENT] about his elevation [EVENT] , writing [UNKNOWN] to selina [PERSON] , lady bradford [PERSON] on 8 august [PERIOD] 1876 , " i am quite tired of that place [PLACE] " but when asked by a friend [PERSON] how he liked the lords [PERSON] , replied , " i am dead ; dead but in the elysian fields [BALL] . " domestic policy legislation [PERSON] under the stewardship [RANK] of richard assheton cross [PERSON] , the home secretary [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] 's new [PLACE] government [GOVERNMENT] enacted many reforms [PERSON] , including the artisans [PERSON] ' and labourers [UNKNOWN] ' dwellings improvement act [ACT] 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict [UNKNOWN] . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans [AGREEMENT] available to towns [ENTITY] and cities [SET] to construct working-class housing [ACQUISITION] . also enacted were the public health [PROPERTY] act [ACT] 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict [UNKNOWN] . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes [PERSON] , the sale [RESULT] of food [FOOD] and drugs act [ACT] 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict [UNKNOWN] . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education [PROCESS] act [ACT] 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict [UNKNOWN] . c. 70 ) . disraeli [PERSON] 's government [GOVERNMENT] introduced a new [PLACE] factory act [ACT] meant to protect workers [UNKNOWN] , the conspiracy [DOCUMENT PART] , and protection [ACT] of property act [ACT] 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict [UNKNOWN] . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing [PERSON] , and the employers [PERSON] and workmen act [ACT] 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict [UNKNOWN] . c. 90 ) to enable workers [UNKNOWN] to sue employers [PERSON] in the civil courts [EVENT] if they broke legal contracts [PERSON] . the sale [RESULT] of food [FOOD] and drugs act [ACT] 1875 prohibited the mixing [ACT] of injurious ingredients [TENDENCY] with articles [ARTICLE] of food [FOOD] or with drugs [DRUG] , and provision [UNKNOWN] was made for the appointment [DECISION] of analysts [PERSON] ; all tea [PERSON] " had to be examined by a customs [EVENT] official on importation [PERSON] , and when in the opinion [TRUST] of the analyst [PERSON] it was unfit for food [FOOD] , the tea [PERSON] had to be destroyed " . the employers [PERSON] and workmen act [ACT] 1875 , according to one study [STUDY] , " finally placed employers [PERSON] and employed on an equal [PERSON] footing before the law [PERSON] " . the conspiracy [DOCUMENT PART] , and protection [ACT] of property [PROPERTY] act [ACT] 1875 established the right [UNKNOWN] to strike by providing that " an agreement [AGREEMENT] or combination [ACT] by one or more [PLACE] persons [PERSON] to do , or procure [UNKNOWN] to be done , any act [ACT] in contemplation [STATE] or furtherance [ACT] of a trade dispute [DISPUTE] between employers [PERSON] and workmen [PERSON] , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy [DOCUMENT PART] if such act [ACT] committed by one person [PERSON] would not be punishable as a crime [EVENT] " . as a result [RESULT] of these social reforms [PERSON] the liberal-labour mp alexander macdonald told his constituents [PERSON] in 1879 , " the conservative party [FORCE] have done more [PLACE] for the working classes [UNKNOWN] in five years [PERIOD] than the liberals [PERSON] have in fifty [PERSON] . " civil service [INSTITUTION] disraeli [PERSON] 's failure [STATE] to appoint samuel wilberforce [PERSON] as bishop [PERSON] of london [PLACE] may [PERIOD] have cost [EVENT] him votes [EVENT] in the 1868 election [POWER] . gladstone [PERSON] in 1870 had sponsored an order [GARMENT] in council [HUMAN GROUP] , introducing competitive examination [PERIOD] into the civil service [INSTITUTION] , diminishing the political aspects [INSTANCE] of government [GOVERNMENT] hiring . disraeli [PERSON] did not agree , and while he did not seek to reverse [PORTION] the order [GARMENT] , his actions [ACTION] often frustrated its intent [STATE] . for example [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , disraeli [PERSON] made political appointments [DECISION] to positions [POSITION] previously given to career [NUMBER] civil servants [PERSON] . he was backed by his party [FORCE] , hungry [UNKNOWN] for office [PLACE] and its emoluments [INSTANCE] after almost thirty years [PERIOD] with only brief spells [LANGUAGE] in government [GOVERNMENT] . disraeli [PERSON] gave positions [POSITION] to hard-up conservative [PERSON] leaders [PERSON] , even—to gladstone [PERSON] 's outrage— creating one office [PLACE] at £2,000 per year [PERIOD] . nevertheless , disraeli [PERSON] made fewer peers [PERSON] ( only 22 , including one of victoria [PLACE] 's sons [PERSON] ) than had gladstone [PERSON] ( 37 during his just over five years [PERIOD] in office [PLACE] ) . as he had in government posts [UNKNOWN] , disraeli [PERSON] rewarded old friends [PERSON] with clerical positions [POSITION] , making sydney turner [PERSON] , son [PERSON] of a good [UNKNOWN] friend [PERSON] of isaac d' israeli [PERSON] , dean [PERSON] of ripon [PERSON] . he favoured low [ABSTRACT ENTITY] church [PERSON] clergymen [DEVICE] in promotion [RESULT] , disliking other movements [UNKNOWN] in anglicanism [CONCEPT] for political reasons [EVENT] . in this , he came into disagreement [EVENT] with the queen [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] out of loyalty [STATE] to her late [PERIOD] husband albert [PERSON] preferred broad church [PERSON] teachings [PERSON] . one controversial appointment [DECISION] had occurred shortly before the 1868 election [POWER] . when the position [POSITION] of archbishop [PERSON] of canterbury [PLACE] fell vacant [UNKNOWN] , disraeli [PERSON] reluctantly agreed to the queen [PERSON] 's preferred candidate [PERSON] , archibald tait [PERSON] , the bishop [PERSON] of london [PLACE] . to fill tait [PERSON] 's vacant [UNKNOWN] see [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] was urged by many people [HUMAN GROUP] to appoint samuel wilberforce [PERSON] , the former bishop [PERSON] of winchester [PLACE] . disraeli [PERSON] disliked wilberforce [PERSON] and instead appointed john jackson [PERSON] , the bishop [PERSON] of lincoln [PERSON] . blake [PERSON] suggested that , on balance [GARMENT] , these appointments [DECISION] cost [EVENT] disraeli [PERSON] more [PLACE] votes [EVENT] than they gained him . foreign policy disraeli [PERSON] always considered foreign affairs [PLACE] to be the most critical and interesting part of statesmanship [SKILL] . nevertheless , his biographer robert blake [PERSON] [PERSON] doubts that his subject [ABILITY] had specific ideas [ACT] about foreign policy [RULE] when he took office [PLACE] in 1874 . he had rarely travelled abroad ; since his youthful tour [EVENT] of the middle east [PLACE] in 1830-1831 , he had left [UNKNOWN] britain [PLACE] only for his honeymoon [ACT] and three visits [EVENT] to paris [PLACE] , the last [UNKNOWN] of which was in 1856 . as he had criticised gladstone [PERSON] for a do-nothing foreign policy [RULE] , he most probably contemplated what actions [ACTION] would reassert britain [PLACE] 's place [PLACE] in europe [PLACE] . his brief first premiership [POSITION] , and the first year [PERIOD] of his second [PERSON] , gave him little opportunity [OPPORTUNITY] to make his mark [ORGANISATION] in foreign affairs [PLACE] . suez portrait [PERSON] of disraeli [PERSON] published in 1873 refer [UNKNOWN] to caption new [PLACE] crowns [UNKNOWN] for old depicts disraeli [PERSON] as abanazar [UNKNOWN] from the pantomime aladdin [PERSON] , offering victoria [PLACE] an imperial crown [PERSON] in exchange [RESULT] for a royal one . disraeli [PERSON] cultivated a public [UNKNOWN] image [IMAGE] of himself as an imperialist [PERSON] with grand gestures [ACTION] such as conferring on queen victoria [PLACE] the title [ACTION] " empress [EVENT] of india [PLACE] " . the suez canal [PERSON] , opened in 1869 , cut weeks [PERIOD] and thousands [UNKNOWN] of miles [COLLECTION] off the sea journey [PERSON] between britain [PLACE] and india [PLACE] ; in 1875 , approximately 80 % of the ships [SHIP] using the canal [PERSON] were british [UNKNOWN] . in the event [EVENT] of another rebellion [FORCE] in india [PLACE] or a russian invasion [GROUP] , the time [PERIOD] saved at suez [PERSON] might be crucial . built by french [PLACE] interests [ELEMENT] , 56 % of the stocks [PERSON] in the canal [PERSON] remained in their hands [PERSON] , while 44 % of the stock [PERSON] belonged to isma [PERSON] 'il pasha [PERSON] , the khedive [UNKNOWN] of egypt [PLACE] . he was notorious for his profligate [PERSON] spending . the canal [PERSON] was losing [PROCESS] money [MONEY] , and an attempt [ACTION] by ferdinand de lesseps [PLACE] , builder [ARTIFACT] of the canal [PERSON] , to raise the tolls [INSTANCE] had fallen through when the khedive [UNKNOWN] had threatened military force [FORCE] to prevent it , and had also attracted disraeli [PERSON] 's attention [ELEMENT] . the khedive [UNKNOWN] governed egypt [PLACE] under the ottoman empire [STATE] ; as in the crimea [PLACE] , the issue [EVENT] of the canal [PERSON] raised the eastern question [QUESTION] of what to do about the decaying empire [STATE] governed from constantinople [UNKNOWN] . with much of the pre-canal trade [PERSON] and communications [UNKNOWN] between britain [PLACE] and india [PLACE] passing through the ottoman empire [STATE] , britain [PLACE] had done its best to prop up the ottomans [PLACE] against the threat [PERSON] that russia [PLACE] would take constantinople [UNKNOWN] , cutting those communications [UNKNOWN] , and giving russian ships [SHIP] unfettered access [OCCURRENCE] to the mediterranean [PLACE] . the french [PLACE] might also threaten those lines [PERSON] . britain [PLACE] had had the opportunity [OPPORTUNITY] to purchase [AMOUNT] shares [ACTION] in the canal [PERSON] but had declined to do so . disraeli [PERSON] sent the liberal mp nathan rothschild [PERSON] to paris [PLACE] to enquire about buying de lesseps [PLACE] 's shares [ACTION] . on 14 november [PERIOD] 1875 , the editor [PERSON] of the pall mall gazette [PERSON] , frederick greenwood [PERSON] , learned from london banker [PLACE] henry [PERSON] oppenheim [PERSON] that the khedive [UNKNOWN] was seeking to sell his shares [ACTION] in the suez canal [PERSON] company [INSTITUTION] to a french [PLACE] firm [INSTITUTION] . greenwood [PERSON] quickly told lord derby [PERSON] , the foreign secretary [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] notified disraeli [PERSON] . the prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] moved immediately to secure [UNKNOWN] the shares [ACTION] . on 23 november [PERIOD] , the khedive [UNKNOWN] offered to sell the shares [ACTION] for 100,000,000 francs [ARTIFACT] . rather than seek the aid [QUANTITY] of the bank [PLACE] of england [PLACE] , disraeli [PERSON] borrowed funds [QUANTITY] from lionel de rothschild [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] took a commission [INSTANCE] on the deal [SITUATION] . the banker [PLACE] 's capital [PLACE] was at risk [STATEMENT] as parliament [HUMAN GROUP] could have refused to ratify the transaction [SUBSTANCE] . the contract [PERSON] for purchase [AMOUNT] was signed at cairo [PLACE] on 25 november [PERIOD] and the shares [ACTION] deposited at the british [UNKNOWN] consulate the following day [PERIOD] . disraeli [PERSON] told the queen [PERSON] , " it is settled ; you have it , madam [PERSON] ! " the public [UNKNOWN] saw the venture [PERSON] as a daring statement [STATEMENT] of british [UNKNOWN] dominance [PERSON] of the seas [QUANTITY] . sir ian malcolm [PERSON] described the suez canal [PERSON] share purchase [AMOUNT] as " the greatest romance [PERSON] of mr . disraeli [PERSON] 's romantic career [NUMBER] " . in the following decades [UNKNOWN] , the security [FORCE] of the suez canal [PERSON] became a major concern [PERSON] of british [UNKNOWN] foreign policy [RULE] . under gladstone [PERSON] , britain [PLACE] took control [GROUP] of egypt [PLACE] in 1882 . a later foreign secretary [PERSON] , lord curzon [PERSON] , described the canal [PERSON] in 1909 as " the determining influence [POWER] of every considerable movement [HUMAN GROUP] of british power [POWER] to the east [PLACE] and south [PLACE] of the mediterranean [PLACE] " . royal titles [ACTION] act [ACT] main article [ARTICLE] : royal titles [ACTION] act [ACT] 1876 although initially curious about disraeli [PERSON] when he entered parliament [HUMAN GROUP] in 1837 , victoria [PLACE] came to detest him over his treatment [TREATMENT] of peel [PERSON] . over time [PERIOD] , her dislike softened , especially as disraeli [PERSON] took pains [CONDITION] to cultivate her . he told matthew arnold [PERSON] , " everybody [UNKNOWN] likes flattery [ACT] ; and , when you come to royalty , you should lay it on with a trowel [TOOL] " . disraeli [PERSON] 's biographer [PERSON] , adam kirsch [PERSON] , suggests that disraeli [PERSON] 's obsequious treatment [TREATMENT] of his queen [PERSON] was part flattery [ACT] , part belief [TRUST] that this was how a queen [PERSON] should be addressed by a loyal subject [ABILITY] , and part awe that a middle-class man [PERSON] of jewish [UNKNOWN] birth [CONDITION] should be the companion [PERSON] of a monarch [PERSON] . by the time [PERIOD] of his second [PERSON] premiership [POSITION] , disraeli [PERSON] had built a strong relationship [RELATIONSHIP] with victoria [PLACE] , probably closer to her than any of her prime ministers [PERSON] except her first , lord melbourne [PERSON] . when disraeli [PERSON] returned as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] in 1874 and went to kiss hands [PERSON] , he did so literally , on one knee [STATE] ; according to richard aldous [PERSON] in his book [ENTITY] on the rivalry [PERSON] between disraeli [PERSON] and gladstone [PERSON] , " victoria [PLACE] and disraeli [PERSON] would exploit their closeness [PLACE] for mutual advantage [CONDITION] . " victoria [PLACE] had long wished to have an imperial title [ACTION] , reflecting britain [PLACE] 's expanding domain [LAND] . she was irked when tsar alexander ii [PERSON] held a higher rank [RANK] than her as an emperor [PERSON] , and was appalled that her daughter [PERSON] , the prussian crown [PERSON] princess [PERSON] , would outrank her when her husband [PERSON] came to the throne [EVENT] . she also saw an imperial title [ACTION] as proclaiming britain [PLACE] 's increased stature [PERSON] in the world [PLACE] . the title [ACTION] " empress [EVENT] of india [PLACE] " had been used informally for some time [PERIOD] and she wished to have that title [ACTION] formally bestowed on her . the queen [PERSON] prevailed upon disraeli [PERSON] to introduce a royal titles [ACTION] bill [PERSON] , and also told of her intent [STATE] to open parliament [HUMAN GROUP] in person [PERSON] , which during this time [PERIOD] she did only when she wanted something from legislators [UNKNOWN] . disraeli [PERSON] was cautious in response [ACT] , as careful soundings [ACTION] of mps [UNKNOWN] brought a negative reaction [PERSON] , and he declined to place [PLACE] such a proposal [ABSTRACT ENTITY] in the queen [PERSON] 's speech [SPEECH] . once the desired bill [PERSON] was finally prepared , disraeli [PERSON] 's handling [AMOUNT] of it was not adept [UNKNOWN] . he neglected to notify either the prince [PERSON] of wales [PLACE] or the opposition [EVENT] and was met by irritation [STATE] from the prince [PERSON] and a full-scale attack [EVENT] from the liberals [PERSON] . an old enemy [PERSON] of disraeli [PERSON] , former liberal chancellor [PERSON] robert lowe [PERSON] , alleged during the debate [STATE] in the commons [UNKNOWN] that two previous prime ministers [PERSON] had refused to introduce such legislation [PERSON] for the queen [PERSON] . gladstone [PERSON] immediately stated that he was not one of them , and the queen [PERSON] gave disraeli [PERSON] leave to quote her saying she had never approached a prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] with such a proposal [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . according to blake [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] " in a brilliant oration [NUMBER] of withering invective proceeded to destroy lowe [PERSON] " , who [UNKNOWN] apologised and never held office [PLACE] again . disraeli [PERSON] said of lowe [PERSON] that he was the only person [PERSON] in london [PLACE] with whom he would not shake hands [PERSON] : " he is in the mud [MONEY] and there i leave him . " fearful of losing [PROCESS] , disraeli [PERSON] was reluctant to bring the bill [PERSON] to a vote [EVENT] in the commons [UNKNOWN] , but when he did it passed with a majority [PROPERTY] of 75 . once the bill [PERSON] was formally enacted , victoria [PLACE] began signing [EVENT] her letters [PURPOSE] " victoria r [PLACE] & i " ( latin [UNKNOWN] : regina et imperatrix [PERSON] , queen [PERSON] and empress [EVENT] ) . according to aldous [PERSON] , the bill [PERSON] " shattered disraeli [PERSON] 's authority [STATUS] in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] " . balkans [UNKNOWN] and bulgaria cavalry [PLACE] wielding sabres [LIGHT] fight men [PERSON] with guns [DEVICE] on foot fight [PERSON] in bulgaria [PLACE] during the russo-turkish war [EVENT] of 1877-78 in july [PERIOD] 1875 serb populations in bosnia [PLACE] and herzegovina [PLACE] , then provinces [ENTITY] of the ottoman empire [STATE] , revolted against the turks [PLACE] , alleging religious persecution [ACT] and poor [UNKNOWN] administration [PLACE] . the following january [PERIOD] , sultan abdülaziz [UNKNOWN] agreed to reforms [PERSON] proposed by hungarian statesman [PERSON] julius andrássy [PERSON] , but the rebels [PERSON] , suspecting they might win their freedom [PERSON] , continued their uprising [ACT] , joined by militants [PERSON] in serbia [PLACE] and bulgaria [PLACE] . the turks [PLACE] suppressed the bulgarian uprising [ACT] harshly , and when reports [SYMBOL] of these actions [ACTION] escaped , disraeli [PERSON] and derby [PERSON] stated in parliament [HUMAN GROUP] that they did not believe them . disraeli [PERSON] called them " coffee-house babble [PLACE] " and dismissed allegations [ACT] of torture [PERSON] by the ottomans [PLACE] since " oriental people [HUMAN GROUP] usually terminate their connections [SET] with culprits [PERSON] in a more [PLACE] expeditious fashion [TENDENCY] " . gladstone [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] had left [UNKNOWN] the liberal [PERSON] leadership [PERSON] and retired from public [UNKNOWN] life [EVENT] , was appalled by reports [SYMBOL] of atrocities [ACT] in bulgaria [PLACE] , and in august [PERIOD] 1876 , penned a hastily written pamphlet [PERSON] arguing that the turks [PLACE] should be deprived of bulgaria [PLACE] because of what they had done there . he sent a copy [STYLE] to disraeli [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] called it " vindictive and ill-written ... of all the bulgarian horrors [STATE] perhaps the greatest " . gladstone [PERSON] 's pamphlet [PERSON] became an immense best-seller and rallied the liberals [PERSON] to urge that the ottoman empire [STATE] should no longer be a british [UNKNOWN] ally . disraeli [PERSON] wrote to lord salisbury [PERSON] on 3 september [PERIOD] , " had it not been for these unhappy ' atrocities [ACT] ' , we should have settled a peace [EVENT] very honourable to england [PLACE] and satisfactory [PERSON] to europe [PLACE] . now we are obliged to work [ACTIVITY] from a new [PLACE] point [PLACE] of departure [EVENT] , and dictate to turkey [PLACE] , who [UNKNOWN] has forfeited all sympathy [EVENT] . " in spite [EVENT] of this , disraeli [PERSON] 's policy [RULE] favoured constantinople [UNKNOWN] and ottoman territorial integrity [EVENT] . four men international [PERSON] delegates at the constantinople conference [ACT] : clockwise [PERSON] from top [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] , saffet pasha [PERSON] ( turkey [PLACE] ) , general ignatieff [PERSON] ( russia [PLACE] ) , lord salisbury [PERSON] ( britain [PLACE] ) and the comte de chaudordy [PERSON] ( france [PLACE] ) disraeli [PERSON] and the cabinet [EVENT] sent salisbury [PERSON] as lead british [UNKNOWN] representative [EVENT] to the constantinople conference [ACT] , which met in december [PERIOD] 1876 and january [PERIOD] 1877 . in advance [EVENT] of the conference [ACT] , disraeli [PERSON] sent salisbury [PERSON] private [PERSON] word [WORD] to seek british [UNKNOWN] military occupation [GROUP] of bulgaria [PLACE] and bosnia [PLACE] , and british control [GROUP] of the ottoman army [HUMAN GROUP] . salisbury [PERSON] ignored these instructions [ACT] , which his biographer [PERSON] , andrew roberts [PERSON] deemed " ludicrous " . the conference [ACT] failed to reach agreement [AGREEMENT] with the turks [PLACE] . parliament [HUMAN GROUP] opened in february [PERIOD] 1877 , with disraeli [PERSON] now in the lords [PERSON] as earl [PERSON] of beaconsfield [PLACE] . he spoke only once there in the 1877 session [PERIOD] on the eastern question [QUESTION] , stating on 20 february [PERIOD] that there was a need [UNKNOWN] for stability [CONDITION] in the balkans [UNKNOWN] , and that forcing turkey [PLACE] into territorial concessions [PERMISSION] would not secure [UNKNOWN] it . the prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] wanted a deal [SITUATION] with the ottomans [PLACE] whereby britain [PLACE] would temporarily occupy strategic areas [PLACE] to deter the russians [UNKNOWN] from war [EVENT] , to be returned on the signing [EVENT] of a peace treaty [ARTIFACT] , but found little support [ACT] in his cabinet [EVENT] , which favoured partition [PLACE] of the ottoman empire [STATE] . as disraeli [PERSON] , by then in poor [UNKNOWN] health [PROPERTY] , continued to battle [PERSON] within the cabinet [EVENT] , russia [PLACE] invaded turkey [PLACE] on 21 april [PERIOD] , beginning the russo-turkish war [EVENT] . congress [ACTIVITY] of berlin main article [ARTICLE] : congress [ACTIVITY] of berlin [PLACE] the russians [UNKNOWN] pushed through ottoman territory [PLACE] and by december [PERIOD] 1877 had captured the strategic bulgarian town [PLACE] of plevna [UNKNOWN] . the war [EVENT] divided the british [UNKNOWN] , but the russian success [ACT] caused some to forget the atrocities [ACT] and call for intervention [ACTION] on the turkish side [PLACE] . others [UNKNOWN] hoped for further russian successes [UNKNOWN] . the fall [PERSON] of plevna [UNKNOWN] was a major story [PERSON] for weeks [PERIOD] , and disraeli [PERSON] 's warnings [PERSON] that russia [PLACE] was a threat [PERSON] to british [UNKNOWN] interests [ELEMENT] in the eastern mediterranean [PLACE] were deemed prophetic . the jingoistic attitude [ATTITUDE] of many britons [UNKNOWN] increased disraeli [PERSON] 's political support [ACT] , and the queen [PERSON] showed her favour [PERSON] by visiting him at hughenden [UNKNOWN] — the first time [PERIOD] she had visited the country [PLACE] home [PLACE] of her prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] since the melbourne ministry [INSTITUTION] . at the end [UNKNOWN] of january [PERIOD] 1878 , the ottoman sultan [PERSON] appealed to britain [PLACE] to save constantinople [UNKNOWN] . amid war [EVENT] fever in britain [PLACE] , the government [GOVERNMENT] asked parliament [HUMAN GROUP] to vote [EVENT] £6,000,000 to prepare the army [HUMAN GROUP] and navy [PERSON] for war [EVENT] . gladstone [PERSON] opposed the measure [MEASURE] , but less than half [PLACE] his party [FORCE] voted with him . popular opinion [TRUST] was with disraeli [PERSON] , though some thought him too soft for not immediately declaring war [EVENT] on russia [PLACE] . a map [UNKNOWN] . see [PERSON] description [ACT] bulgaria [PLACE] as constituted under the san stefano treaty [ARTIFACT] and as divided at berlin [PLACE] with the russians [UNKNOWN] close to constantinople [UNKNOWN] , the turks [PLACE] yielded and in march [PERIOD] 1878 , signed the treaty [ARTIFACT] of san stefano [PLACE] , conceding a bulgarian state [STATE] covering a large part of the balkans [UNKNOWN] . it would be initially russian-occupied and many feared that it would give them a client state [STATE] close to constantinople [UNKNOWN] . other ottoman possessions [STATE] in europe [PLACE] would become independent ; additional territory [PLACE] was to be ceded directly to russia [PLACE] . this was unacceptable to the british [UNKNOWN] , who [UNKNOWN] protested , hoping to get the russians [UNKNOWN] to agree to attend an international conference [ACT] which german chancellor [PERSON] bismarck [FOOD] proposed to hold at berlin [PLACE] . the cabinet [EVENT] discussed disraeli [PERSON] 's proposal [ABSTRACT ENTITY] to position [POSITION] indian troops [HUMAN GROUP] at malta [PLACE] for possible transit [DOCUMENT] to the balkans [UNKNOWN] and call out reserves [UNKNOWN] . derby [PERSON] resigned in protest [GROUP] , and disraeli [PERSON] appointed salisbury [PERSON] as foreign secretary [PERSON] . amid british [UNKNOWN] preparations [PERSON] for war [EVENT] , the russians [UNKNOWN] and turks [PLACE] agreed to discussions [EVENT] at berlin [PLACE] . in advance [EVENT] of the meeting [ACTIVITY] , confidential negotiations [PROCESS] took place [PLACE] between britain [PLACE] and russia [PLACE] in april [PERIOD] and may [PERIOD] 1878 . the russians [UNKNOWN] were willing to make changes [UNKNOWN] to the big bulgaria [PLACE] , but were determined to retain their new [PLACE] possessions [STATE] , bessarabia [UNKNOWN] in europe [PLACE] and batum [UNKNOWN] and kars [PLACE] on the east [PLACE] coast [EVENT] of the black sea [PLACE] . to counterbalance this , britain [PLACE] required a possession [STATE] in the eastern mediterranean [PLACE] where it might base [ABSTRACT ENTITY] ships [SHIP] and troops [HUMAN GROUP] and negotiated with the ottomans [PLACE] for the cession [EVENT] of cyprus [PLACE] . once this was secretly agreed , disraeli [PERSON] was prepared to allow russia [PLACE] 's territorial gains [PERSON] . refer [UNKNOWN] to caption disraeli [PERSON] ( right [UNKNOWN] ) and salisbury [PERSON] as knights [PERSON] of the garter [WORD] , portrayed by john tenniel [PERSON] in the pas de deux [PLACE] ( from the scène de triomphe [GAME] in the grand anglo-turkish ballet d'action ) the congress [ACTIVITY] of berlin [PLACE] was held in june [PERIOD] and july [PERIOD] 1878 , the central relationship [RELATIONSHIP] in it that between disraeli [PERSON] and bismarck [FOOD] . in later years [PERIOD] , the german chancellor [PERSON] would show visitors [PERSON] to his office [PLACE] three pictures [PICTURE] on the wall [RESOURCE] : " the portrait [PERSON] of my sovereign [PERSON] , there on the right [UNKNOWN] that of my wife [PERSON] , and on the left [UNKNOWN] , there , that of lord beaconsfield [PLACE] " . disraeli [PERSON] caused an uproar [SOUND] in the congress [ACTIVITY] by making his opening [EVENT] address [UNKNOWN] in english [EVENT] , rather than in french [PLACE] , hitherto [UNKNOWN] accepted as the international language [LANGUAGE] of diplomacy [BRANCH] . by one account [COLLECTION] , the british ambassador [ENTITY] in berlin [PLACE] , lord odo russell [PERSON] , hoping to spare the delegates disraeli [PERSON] 's very poor [UNKNOWN] french [PLACE] accent [PROCESS] , told disraeli [PERSON] that the congress [ACTIVITY] was hoping to hear a speech [SPEECH] in english [EVENT] by one of its masters [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] much of the detailed work [ACTIVITY] to salisbury [PERSON] , concentrating his efforts [ACTION] on making it as difficult as possible for the broken-up big bulgaria [PLACE] to reunite . disraeli [PERSON] intended that batum [UNKNOWN] be demilitarised , but the russians [UNKNOWN] obtained their preferred language [LANGUAGE] , and in 1886 , fortified the town [PLACE] . nevertheless , the cyprus convention [PLACE] ceding the island [PLACE] to britain [PLACE] was announced during the congress [ACTIVITY] , and again made disraeli [PERSON] a sensation [ACTION] . disraeli [PERSON] gained agreement [AGREEMENT] that turkey [PLACE] should retain enough of its european possessions [STATE] to safeguard the dardanelles [UNKNOWN] . by one account [COLLECTION] , when met with russian intransigence [EVENT] , disraeli [PERSON] told his secretary [PERSON] to order [GARMENT] a special train [TRAIN] to return [STATEMENT] them home [PLACE] to begin the war [EVENT] . czar alexander ii [PERSON] later described the congress [ACTIVITY] as " a european coalition [GROUP] against russia [PLACE] , under bismarck [FOOD] " . the treaty [ARTIFACT] of berlin [PLACE] was signed on 13 july [PERIOD] 1878 at the radziwill palace [PERSON] in berlin [PLACE] . disraeli [PERSON] and salisbury [PERSON] returned home [PLACE] to heroes [UNKNOWN] ' receptions [PERSON] . at the door [ACT] of 10 downing street [PLACE] , disraeli [PERSON] received flowers [ARTIFACT] sent by the queen [PERSON] . there , he told the gathered crowd [GROUP] , " lord salisbury [PERSON] and i have brought you back peace— but a peace [EVENT] i hope [EVENT] with honour [UNKNOWN] . " the queen [PERSON] offered him a dukedom [UNKNOWN] , which he declined , though accepting the garter [WORD] , as long as salisbury [PERSON] also received it . in berlin [PLACE] , word spread [FOOD] of bismarck [FOOD] 's admiring description [ACT] of disraeli [PERSON] , " der [PERSON] alte jude [PERSON] , das [UNKNOWN] ist der [PERSON] mann [PERSON] ! " in the weeks [PERIOD] after berlin [PLACE] , disraeli [PERSON] and the cabinet [EVENT] considered calling [PERSON] a general election [POWER] to capitalise on the public [UNKNOWN] applause he and salisbury [PERSON] had received . parliaments [ACT] were then for a seven-year term [TERM] , and it was the custom [QUANTITY] not to go to the country [PLACE] until the sixth year [PERIOD] unless forced to by events [PLACE] . only four and a half years [PERIOD] had passed and they did not see [PERSON] any clouds [SUBSTANCE] on the horizon [PLACE] that might forecast conservative [PERSON] defeat [BODY] if they waited . this decision [DECISION] not to seek re-election has often been cited as a great mistake [EVENT] by disraeli [PERSON] . blake [PERSON] , however , pointed out that results [RESULT] in local elections [POWER] had been moving against the conservatives [UNKNOWN] , and doubted if disraeli [PERSON] missed any great opportunity [OPPORTUNITY] by waiting . afghanistan [PLACE] to zululand main articles [ARTICLE] : second [PERSON] anglo-afghan war [EVENT] and anglo-zulu war [EVENT] a depiction [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of the battle [PERSON] of kandahar [PLACE] , fought in 1880 . britain [PLACE] 's victory [PERSON] in the second [PERSON] anglo-afghan war [EVENT] proved a boost [PERSON] to disraeli [PERSON] 's government [GOVERNMENT] . as successful invasions [GROUP] of india [PLACE] generally came through afghanistan [PLACE] , the british [UNKNOWN] had observed and sometimes intervened there since the 1830s , hoping to keep the russians [UNKNOWN] out . in 1878 the russians [UNKNOWN] sent a mission [PERSON] to kabul [PLACE] ; it was not rejected by the afghans [EVENT] , as the british [UNKNOWN] had hoped . the british [UNKNOWN] proposed to send their own mission [PERSON] , insisting that the russians [UNKNOWN] be sent away . the viceroy [PERSON] of india lord lytton [PLACE] concealed his plans [UNKNOWN] to issue [EVENT] this ultimatum [EVENT] from disraeli [PERSON] , and when the prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] insisted he take no action [ACTION] , went ahead anyway . when the afghans [EVENT] made no answer [PERSON] , lord cranbrook [PERSON] as secretary [PERSON] of state [STATE] for war [EVENT] , ordered the advance [EVENT] against them in the second [PERSON] anglo-afghan war [EVENT] . under lord roberts [PERSON] , the british [UNKNOWN] easily defeated them and installed a new [PLACE] ruler [PLACE] , leaving a mission [PERSON] and garrison [PERSON] in kabul [PLACE] . british [UNKNOWN] policy [RULE] in south africa [PLACE] was to encourage federation [HUMAN GROUP] between the british-run cape colony [PERSON] and natal [PERSON] , and the boer republics [PERSON] , the transvaal [UNKNOWN] ( annexed by britain [PLACE] in 1877 ) and the orange free state [STATE] . the governor [PERSON] of cape colony [PERSON] , sir bartle [PERSON] frere , believing that the federation [HUMAN GROUP] could not be accomplished until the native tribes [WORD] acknowledged british [UNKNOWN] rule [RULE] , made demands [EVENT] on the zulu [UNKNOWN] and their king [PERSON] , cetewayo [UNKNOWN] , which they were certain to reject . as zulu troops [HUMAN GROUP] could not marry until they had washed their spears [ACTION] in blood [STATE] , they were eager for combat [CONDITION] . frere did not send word [WORD] to the cabinet [EVENT] of what he had done until the ultimatum [EVENT] was about to expire . disraeli [PERSON] and the cabinet [EVENT] reluctantly backed him , and in early january [PERIOD] 1879 resolved to send reinforcements [PERMISSION] . before they could arrive , on 22 january [PERIOD] , a zulu impi [PERSON] ( army [HUMAN GROUP] ) , moving with great speed [STATE] and endurance [DISTANCE] , destroyed a british [UNKNOWN] encampment [ACT] in south africa [PLACE] in the battle [PERSON] of isandlwana [UNKNOWN] . over a thousand british [UNKNOWN] and colonial troops [HUMAN GROUP] were killed . word [WORD] of the defeat [BODY] did not reach london [PLACE] until 12 february [PERIOD] . disraeli [PERSON] wrote the next day [PERIOD] , " the terrible disaster [EVENT] has shaken me to the centre [UNKNOWN] " . he reprimanded frere , but left [UNKNOWN] him in charge [AMOUNT] , attracting fire [FIRE] from all sides [ENTITY] . disraeli [PERSON] sent general sir garnet wolseley [PERSON] as high commissioner [PERSON] and commander [PERSON] in chief [PERSON] , and cetewayo [UNKNOWN] and the zulus [UNKNOWN] were crushed at the battle [PERSON] of ulundi [UNKNOWN] on 4 july [PERIOD] 1879 . on 8 september [PERIOD] 1879 sir louis cavagnari , in charge [AMOUNT] of the mission [PERSON] in kabul [PLACE] , was killed with his entire staff [GOVERNMENT] by rebelling afghan soldiers [GROUP] . roberts [PERSON] undertook a successful punitive expedition [ACT] against the afghans [EVENT] over the next six weeks. 1880 election [POWER] main article : 1880 united kingdom general election [POWER] [PLACE] in december [PERIOD] 1878 , gladstone [PERSON] was offered the liberal [PERSON] nomination [DEVICE] for edinburghshire [PLACE] , a constituency [PLACE] popularly known as midlothian [UNKNOWN] . the small [PERSON] scottish electorate [PERSON] was dominated by two noblemen [UNKNOWN] , the conservative duke [PERSON] of buccleuch [UNKNOWN] and the liberal earl [PERSON] of rosebery [PERSON] . the earl [PERSON] , a friend [PERSON] of both disraeli [PERSON] and gladstone [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] would succeed the latter [UNKNOWN] after his final term [TERM] as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] , had journeyed to the united states [PLACE] to view [PERSON] politics [ACTION] there , and was convinced that aspects [INSTANCE] of american [PLACE] electioneering [ACTIVITY] techniques [TECHNIQUE] could be translated to britain [PLACE] . on his advice [DECISION] , gladstone [PERSON] accepted the offer [OFFER] in january [PERIOD] 1879 , and later that year [PERIOD] began his midlothian campaign [PERSON] , speaking not only in edinburgh [PLACE] , but across britain [PLACE] , attacking disraeli [PERSON] , to huge [UNKNOWN] crowds [GROUP] . conservative [PERSON] chances [QUALITY] of re-election were damaged by the poor [UNKNOWN] weather [NUMBER] , and consequent effects [EFFECT] on agriculture [STUDY] . four consecutive wet summers [PERSON] through 1879 had led to poor [UNKNOWN] harvests [UNKNOWN] . in the past [PERIOD] , the farmer [PERSON] had the consolation [INSTANCE] of higher prices [AMOUNT] at such times [UNKNOWN] , but with bumper crops [NUMBER] cheaply transported from the united states [PLACE] , grain prices [AMOUNT] remained low [ABSTRACT ENTITY] . other european nations [PERSON] , faced with similar circumstances [EVENT] , opted for protection [ACT] , and disraeli [PERSON] was urged to reinstitute the corn laws [PERSON] . he declined , stating that he regarded the matter [PERSON] as settled . protection [ACT] would have been highly unpopular among the newly enfranchised urban working classes [UNKNOWN] , as it would raise their cost [EVENT] of living [PERSON] . amid an economic slump [ACTIVITY] generally , the conservatives [UNKNOWN] lost support [ACT] among farmers [PERSON] . disraeli [PERSON] 's health [PROPERTY] continued to fail through 1879 . owing to his infirmities [CONDITION] , disraeli [PERSON] was 45 minutes [PERIOD] late [PERIOD] for the lord mayor [HUMAN ROLE] 's dinner [FOOD] at the guild hall [PLACE] in november [PERIOD] , at which it is customary that the prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] speaks . though many commented on how healthy he looked , it took him great effort [ACTION] to appear so , and when he told the audience [EVENT] he expected to speak to the dinner [FOOD] again the following year [PERIOD] , attendees [PERSON] chuckled . gladstone [PERSON] was then in the midst [PLACE] of his campaign [PERSON] . despite his public [UNKNOWN] confidence [EMOTION] , disraeli [PERSON] recognised that the conservatives [UNKNOWN] would probably lose the next election [POWER] and was already contemplating his resignation honours [UNKNOWN] . despite this pessimism [STATE] , conservatives [UNKNOWN] hopes [EVENT] were buoyed in early 1880 with successes [UNKNOWN] in by-elections the liberals [PERSON] had expected to win , concluding with victory [PERSON] in southwark [PLACE] , normally a liberal [PERSON] stronghold [PLACE] . the cabinet [EVENT] had resolved to wait before dissolving parliament [HUMAN GROUP] ; in early march [PERIOD] they reconsidered , agreeing to go to the country [PLACE] as soon as possible . parliament [HUMAN GROUP] was dissolved on 24 march [PERIOD] ; the first borough constituencies [PLACE] began voting a week [PERIOD] later . disraeli [PERSON] took no public [UNKNOWN] part in the electioneering [ACTIVITY] , it being deemed improper [UNKNOWN] for peers [PERSON] to make speeches [SPEECH] to influence [POWER] commons elections [POWER] . this meant that the chief [PERSON] conservatives— disraeli [PERSON] , salisbury [PERSON] , and india secretary [PERSON] lord [PERSON] cranbrook— would not be heard from . the election [POWER] was thought likely to be close . once returns [STATEMENT] began to be announced , it became clear that the conservatives [UNKNOWN] were decisively beaten . the final result [RESULT] gave the liberals [PERSON] an absolute majority [PROPERTY] of about 50 . final months [PERIOD] , death [EVENT] , and memorials disraeli [PERSON] refused to cast blame [PERSON] for the defeat [BODY] , which he understood was likely to be final for him . he wrote to lady bradford [PERSON] that it was just as much work [ACTIVITY] to end [UNKNOWN] a government [GOVERNMENT] as to form [FORM] one , without any of the fun [PERSON] . queen victoria [PLACE] was bitter at his departure [EVENT] . among the honours [UNKNOWN] he arranged before resigning as prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] on 21 april [PERIOD] 1880 was one for his private [PERSON] secretary [PERSON] , montagu corry [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] became baron rowton [PERSON] . a death mask [PLACE] resembling disraeli disraeli [PERSON] 's death mask [PLACE] a grave disraeli [PERSON] 's tomb [PERSON] at hughenden [UNKNOWN] returning to hughenden [UNKNOWN] , disraeli [PERSON] brooded over his electoral dismissal [PERSON] , but also resumed work [ACTIVITY] on endymion [PERSON] , which he had begun in 1872 and laid aside before the 1874 election [POWER] . the work [ACTIVITY] was rapidly completed and published by november [PERIOD] 1880 . he carried on a correspondence [SIMILARITY] with victoria [PLACE] , with letters [PURPOSE] passed through intermediaries [PERSON] . when parliament [HUMAN GROUP] met in january [PERIOD] 1881 , he served as conservative [PERSON] leader [PERSON] in the lords [PERSON] , attempting to serve as a moderating influence [POWER] on gladstone [PERSON] 's legislation [PERSON] . because of his asthma [CONDITION] and gout [CONDITION] , disraeli [PERSON] went out as little as possible , fearing more [PLACE] serious episodes [EVENT] of illness [ILLNESS] . in march [PERIOD] , he fell ill [PERSON] with bronchitis [UNKNOWN] , and emerged from bed [UNKNOWN] only for a meeting [ACTIVITY] with salisbury [PERSON] and other conservative [PERSON] leaders [PERSON] on the 26th . as it became clear that this might be his final sickness [EMOTION] , friends [PERSON] and opponents [PERSON] alike came to call . disraeli [PERSON] declined a visit [EVENT] from the queen [PERSON] , saying , " she would only ask me to take a message [SPEECH ACT] to albert [PERSON] . " almost blind , when he received the last [UNKNOWN] letter [PURPOSE] from victoria [PLACE] of which he was aware on 5 april [PERIOD] , he held it momentarily , then had it read to him by lord barrington [PERSON] , a privy councillor [EVENT] . one card [GROUP] , signed " a workman [PERSON] " , delighted its recipient [PERSON] : " do n't die yet , we ca n't do without you . " despite the gravity [PERSON] of disraeli [PERSON] 's condition [CONDITION] , the doctors [RESOURCE] concocted optimistic bulletins [INFORMATION] for public [UNKNOWN] consumption [CONDITION] . prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] gladstone [PERSON] called several times [UNKNOWN] to enquire about his rival [PERSON] 's condition [CONDITION] , and wrote in his diary [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , " may [PERIOD] the almighty [UNKNOWN] be near his pillow [QUANTITY] . " there was intense public [UNKNOWN] interest [ELEMENT] in disraeli [PERSON] 's struggles [FORCE] for life [EVENT] . disraeli [PERSON] had customarily taken the sacrament [CAUSE] at easter [PERSON] ; when this day [PERIOD] was observed on 17 april [PERIOD] , there was discussion [EVENT] among his friends [PERSON] and family [HUMAN GROUP] if he should be given the opportunity [OPPORTUNITY] , but those against , fearing that he would lose hope [EVENT] , prevailed . on the morning [PERSON] of the following day [PERIOD] , easter monday [PERIOD] , he became incoherent , then comatose . disraeli [PERSON] 's last [UNKNOWN] confirmed words [WORD] before dying at his home [PLACE] at 19 curzon street [PLACE] in the early morning [PERSON] of 19 april [PERIOD] were " i had rather live but i am not afraid to die " . the anniversary [TIME PERIOD] of disraeli [PERSON] 's death [EVENT] was for some years [PERIOD] commemorated in the united kingdom [PLACE] as primrose day [PERIOD] . despite having been offered a state funeral [ACTION] by queen victoria [PLACE] , disraeli [PERSON] 's executors [PERSON] decided against a public [UNKNOWN] procession [STATE] and funeral [ACTION] , fearing that too large crowds [GROUP] would gather to do him honour [UNKNOWN] . the chief [PERSON] mourners [PERSON] at the service [INSTITUTION] at hughenden [UNKNOWN] on 26 april [PERIOD] were his brother ralph [PERSON] and nephew coningsby [UNKNOWN] , to whom hughenden [UNKNOWN] would eventually pass ; gathorne gathorne-hardy , viscount cranbrook [PERSON] , despite most of disraeli [PERSON] 's former cabinet [EVENT] being present , was notably absent [UNKNOWN] in italy [PLACE] . queen victoria [PLACE] was prostrated with grief [CONDITION] , and considered ennobling ralph [PERSON] or coningsby [UNKNOWN] as a memorial [STATEMENT] to disraeli [PERSON] ( without children [PERSON] , his titles [ACTION] became extinct with his death [EVENT] ) , but decided against it on the ground [AMOUNT] that their means were too small [PERSON] for a peerage [COLLECTION] . protocol [SET] forbade her attending disraeli [PERSON] 's funeral [ACTION] ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii [PERSON] attended the rites [EVENT] for the former prime minister sir winston [PERSON] churchill [PERSON] ) but she sent primroses [PLANT] ( " his favourite flowers [ARTIFACT] " ) to the funeral [ACTION] and visited the burial vault [PERSON] to place [PLACE] a wreath [BODY] four days [PERIOD] later . a statue [PERSON] on a podium statue [PERSON] of disraeli [PERSON] in parliament square [PLACE] , london disraeli [PERSON] is buried with his wife [PERSON] in a vault [PERSON] beneath the church [PERSON] of st michael [PLACE] and all angels [PLACE] which stands in the grounds [AMOUNT] of his home [PLACE] , hughenden manor [PERSON] . there is also a memorial [STATEMENT] to him in the chancel [SPACE] in the church [PERSON] , erected in his honour [UNKNOWN] by queen victoria [PLACE] . his literary executor [PERSON] was his private [PERSON] secretary [PERSON] , lord rowton [PERSON] . the disraeli vault [PERSON] also contains the body [BODY] of sarah brydges willyams [UNKNOWN] , the wife [PERSON] of james brydges willyams [UNKNOWN] of st mawgan [PLACE] . disraeli [PERSON] carried on a long correspondence [SIMILARITY] with mrs [UNKNOWN] . willyams [UNKNOWN] , writing [UNKNOWN] frankly about political affairs [PLACE] . at her death [EVENT] in 1865 , she left [UNKNOWN] him a large legacy [PERSON] , which helped clear his debts [MONEY] . his will was proved in april [PERIOD] 1882 at £84,019 18 s. 7 d. ( roughly equivalent to £10,705,647 in 2023 ) . disraeli [PERSON] has a memorial [STATEMENT] in westminster abbey [PERSON] , erected by the nation [PERSON] on the motion [REQUEST] of gladstone [PERSON] in his memorial speech [SPEECH] on disraeli [PERSON] in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] . gladstone [PERSON] had absented himself from the funeral [ACTION] , with his plea [STATEMENT] of the press [INSTITUTION] of public [UNKNOWN] business [STATE] met with public [UNKNOWN] mockery [PERSON] . his speech [SPEECH] was widely anticipated , if only because his dislike for disraeli [PERSON] was well known . in the event [EVENT] , the speech [SPEECH] was a model [STYLE] of its kind [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , in which he avoided comment [EVENT] on disraeli [PERSON] 's politics [ACTION] while praising his personal qualities [QUALITY] . legacy [PERSON] disraeli [PERSON] 's literary and political career [NUMBER] interacted over his lifetime [PERSON] and fascinated victorian britain [PLACE] , making him " one of the most eminent figures [FIGURE] in victorian [PERSON] public [UNKNOWN] life [EVENT] " , and occasioned a large output [ARTIFACT] of commentary [SPEECH ACT] . critic shane leslie [PERSON] noted three decades [UNKNOWN] after his death [EVENT] that " disraeli [PERSON] 's career [NUMBER] was a romance [PERSON] such as no eastern [PLACE] vizier [PLACE] or western plutocrat [PLACE] could tell . he began as a pioneer [UNKNOWN] in dress [SET] and an aesthete [PERSON] of words [WORD] ... disraeli [PERSON] actually made his novels [UNKNOWN] come true . " literary the cover of a book [ENTITY] , entitled " sybil [PERSON] ; or , the two nations [PERSON] " title page [DOCUMENT] of first edition [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of sybil [PERSON] ( 1845 ) disraeli [PERSON] 's novels [UNKNOWN] are his main literary achievement [ACT] . they have from the outset [EVENT] divided critical opinion [TRUST] . the writer r. w. stewart [PERSON] observed that there have always been two criteria [RULE] for judging disraeli [PERSON] 's novels— political and artistic . the critic robert o' kell [PERSON] , concurring , writes , " it is after all , even if you are a tory [PERSON] of the staunchest [PERSON] blue , impossible to make disraeli [PERSON] into a first-rate novelist [PERSON] . and it is equally impossible , no matter [PERSON] how much you deplore the extravagances [AMOUNT] and improprieties [CONDITION] of his works [UNKNOWN] , to make him into an insignificant one . " disraeli [PERSON] 's early " silver fork [HORSE] " novels vivian grey [PERSON] ( 1826 ) and the young duke [PERSON] ( 1831 ) featured romanticised depictions [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of aristocratic life [EVENT] ( despite his ignorance [CONDITION] of it ) with character [FORCE] sketches [SPEECH ACT] of well-known public [UNKNOWN] figures [FIGURE] lightly disguised . in some of his early fiction disraeli [PERSON] also portrayed himself and what he felt to be his byronic dual nature [NATURE] : the poet [PERSON] and the man [PERSON] of action [ACTION] . his most autobiographical novel [EVENT] was contarini [PERSON] fleming ( 1832 ) , an avowedly serious work [ACTIVITY] that did not sell well . the critic william kuhn [PERSON] suggests that disraeli [PERSON] 's fiction [STATEMENT] can be read as " the memoirs [ABSTRACT ENTITY] he never wrote " , revealing the inner life [EVENT] of a politician [PERSON] for whom the norms [STATE] of victorian [PERSON] public [UNKNOWN] life [EVENT] appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard [EVENT] to what kuhn [PERSON] sees as the author [PERSON] 's " ambiguous sexuality [EMOTION] " . of the other novels [UNKNOWN] of the early 1830s , alroy [PERSON] is described by blake [PERSON] as " profitable but unreadable " , and the rise [PERSON] of iskander [PERSON] ( 1833 ) and the infernal marriage [EVENT] and ixion [UNKNOWN] in heaven [PERSON] ( 1834 ) made little impact [ACTION] . henrietta temple [PERSON] ( 1837 ) was disraeli [PERSON] 's next major success [ACT] . it draws on the events [PLACE] of his affair [PLACE] with henrietta sykes [PERSON] to tell the story [PERSON] of a debt-ridden young man [PERSON] torn between a mercenary loveless marriage [EVENT] and a passionate love [PERSON] at first sight [CONCLUSION] for the eponymous heroine [PERSON] . venetia [PERSON] ( 1837 ) was a minor work [ACTIVITY] , written to raise much-needed cash [PERSON] . in the 1840s disraeli [PERSON] wrote a trilogy [SET] of novels [UNKNOWN] with political themes [AGREEMENT] . coningsby [UNKNOWN] attacks [EVENT] the evils [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of the whig reform bill [PERSON] [PERSON] of 1832 and castigates the leaderless conservatives [UNKNOWN] for not responding . sybil [PERSON] ; or , the two nations [PERSON] ( 1845 ) reveals peel [PERSON] 's betrayal [ACT] over the corn laws [PERSON] . these themes [AGREEMENT] are expanded in tancred [PERSON] ( 1847 ) . with coningsby [UNKNOWN] ; or , the new generation [PLACE] ( 1844 ) , disraeli [PERSON] , in blake [PERSON] 's view [PERSON] , " infused the novel [EVENT] genre [UNKNOWN] with political sensibility [VALUE] , espousing the belief [TRUST] that england [PLACE] 's future [VALUE] as a world power [POWER] depended not on the complacent old guard [NUMBER] , but on youthful , idealistic politicians [PERSON] . " sybil [PERSON] ; or , the two nations [PERSON] was less idealistic than coningsby [UNKNOWN] ; the " two nations [PERSON] " of its sub-title referred to the huge [UNKNOWN] economic and social gap [PLACE] between the privileged few [UNKNOWN] and the deprived working classes [UNKNOWN] . the last [UNKNOWN] was tancred [PERSON] ; or , the new crusade [PLACE] ( 1847 ) , promoting the church [PERSON] of england [PLACE] 's role [ROLE] in reviving britain [PLACE] 's flagging spirituality [INSTANCE] . disraeli [PERSON] often wrote about religion [UNKNOWN] , for he was a strong promoter [RANK] of the church [PERSON] of england [PLACE] . he was troubled by the growth [INCREASE] of elaborate rituals [UNKNOWN] in the late [PERIOD] 19th century [PERIOD] , such as the use [USE] of incense [EVENT] and vestments [UNKNOWN] , and heard warnings [PERSON] to the effect [EFFECT] that the ritualists [PERSON] were going to turn control [GROUP] of the church [PERSON] of england [PLACE] over to the pope [PERSON] . he consequently was a strong supporter [PERSON] of the public worship [PERSON] regulation [PERSON] act [ACT] 1874 which allowed the archbishops [PERSON] to go to court [EVENT] to stop the ritualists [PERSON] . lothair [PERSON] was " disraeli [PERSON] 's ideological pilgrim [PERSON] 's progress [ACTION] " , it tells a story [PERSON] of political life [EVENT] with particular regard [EVENT] to the roles [ROLE] of the anglican [UNKNOWN] and roman catholic churches [PERSON] . it reflected anti-catholicism of the sort [TENDENCY] that was popular in britain [PLACE] , and which fueled support [ACT] for italian unification [TERM] ( " risorgimento [UNKNOWN] " ) . endymion [PERSON] , despite having a whig [LIQUID] as hero [PERSON] , is a last [UNKNOWN] exposition [AGREEMENT] of the author [PERSON] 's economic policies [RULE] and political beliefs [TRUST] . disraeli [PERSON] continued to the last [UNKNOWN] to pillory his enemies [PERSON] in barely disguised caricatures [UNKNOWN] : the character st barbe [PERSON] in endymion [PERSON] is widely seen as a parody [EVENT] of thackeray [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] had offended disraeli [PERSON] more [PLACE] than thirty years [PERIOD] earlier by lampooning him in punch [PERSON] as " codlingsby [UNKNOWN] " . disraeli [PERSON] left [UNKNOWN] an unfinished novel [EVENT] in which the priggish central character [FORCE] , falconet [PERSON] , is unmistakably a caricature [PERSON] of gladstone [PERSON] . blake [PERSON] commented that disraeli [PERSON] " produced an epic poem [PERSON] , unbelievably bad , and a five-act blank verse tragedy [SITUATION] , if possible worse . further he wrote a discourse [QUANTITY] on political theory [COGNITIVE STATE] and a political biography [SEQUENCE] , the life [EVENT] of lord george [PERSON] bentinck [PERSON] , which is excellent ... remarkably fair and accurate . " political part of a series [SERIES] on one-nation conservatism [ATTITUDE] principles [PERSON] * class collaboration [PERSON] * conservatism [ATTITUDE] * muscular liberalism [BODY] * noblesse oblige [UNKNOWN] * paternalism [TREATMENT] * pragmatism [ACT] * social policy [RULE] * responsibility [RESPONSIBILITY] * subsidiarity [RULE] * welfare state people [HUMAN GROUP] * disraeli [PERSON] * burke [PERSON] * churchill [PERSON] ( lord randolph [PERSON] ) * churchill [PERSON] ( winston [PERSON] ) * baldwin [PERSON] * macmillan [PERSON] * butler [PERSON] * howard [PERSON] * cameron [PERSON] * may [PERIOD] * osborne [PERSON] * johnson [PERSON] * sunak documents [UNKNOWN] * sybil [PERSON] , or the two nations [PERSON] * coningsby [UNKNOWN] , or the new generation [PLACE] * industrial charter organisations [PERSON] * conservative party [FORCE] * tory reform [AMOUNT] group [GROUP] * bright blue [PERSON] * one nation conservatives [UNKNOWN] caucus [PERSON] * conservatism [ATTITUDE] portal * icon politics [ACTION] portal * flag united kingdom [PLACE] portal [PERSON] * v * t * e portrait [PERSON] of benjamin disraeli [PERSON] by john everett millais [PERSON] , 1881 in the years [PERIOD] after disraeli [PERSON] 's death [EVENT] , as salisbury [PERSON] began his reign [PLACE] of more [PLACE] than twenty years [PERIOD] over the conservatives [UNKNOWN] , the party [FORCE] emphasised the late [PERIOD] leader [PERSON] 's " one nation [PERSON] " views [PERSON] , that the conservatives [UNKNOWN] at root [ARTIFACT] shared the beliefs [TRUST] of the working classes [UNKNOWN] , with the liberals [PERSON] the party [FORCE] of the urban élite [PERSON] . the memory [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of disraeli [PERSON] was used by the conservatives [UNKNOWN] to appeal to the working classes [UNKNOWN] , with whom he was said to have had a rapport [RELATIONSHIP] . this aspect [INSTANCE] of his policies [RULE] has been re-evaluated by historians [PERSON] in the 20th and 21st centuries [PERIOD] . in 1972 b. h. abbott [PERSON] stressed that it was not disraeli [PERSON] but lord randolph churchill [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] invented the term [TERM] " tory democracy [QUALITY] " , though it was disraeli [PERSON] who [UNKNOWN] made it an essential part of conservative [PERSON] policy [RULE] and philosophy [STATE] . in 2007 parry [PERSON] wrote , " the tory [PERSON] democrat myth [COLLECTION] did not survive detailed scrutiny [ACT] by professional historical writing [UNKNOWN] of the 1960s demonstrated that disraeli [PERSON] had very little interest [ELEMENT] in a programme [UNKNOWN] of social legislation [PERSON] and was very flexible in handling [AMOUNT] parliamentary reform [AMOUNT] in 1867 . " despite this , parry [PERSON] sees disraeli [PERSON] , rather than peel [PERSON] , as the founder [PERSON] of the modern conservative party [FORCE] . the conservative [PERSON] politician [PERSON] and writer douglas hurd [PERSON] wrote in 2013 , " was not a one-nation conservative— and this was not simply because he never used the phrase [PHRASE] . he rejected the concept [CONCEPT] in its entirety [UNKNOWN] . " disraeli [PERSON] 's enthusiastic propagation [MONEY] of the british empire [STATE] has also been seen as appealing to working-class voters [PERSON] . before his leadership [PERSON] of the conservative party [FORCE] , imperialism [PLACE] was the province [PLACE] of the liberals [PERSON] , most notably palmerston [UNKNOWN] . disraeli [PERSON] made the conservatives [UNKNOWN] the party [FORCE] that most loudly supported both the empire [STATE] and military action [ACTION] to assert its primacy [COLLECTION] . this came about in part because disraeli [PERSON] 's own views [PERSON] stemmed that way [UNKNOWN] , in part because he saw advantage [CONDITION] for the conservatives [UNKNOWN] , and partially in reaction [PERSON] against gladstone [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] disliked the expense [ACT] of empire [STATE] . blake [PERSON] argued that disraeli [PERSON] 's imperialism [PLACE] " decisively orientated the conservative party [FORCE] for many years [PERIOD] to come , and the tradition [STYLE] which he started was probably a bigger electoral asset [ASSET] in winning working-class support [ACT] during the last [UNKNOWN] quarter [PLACE] of the century [PERIOD] than anything [ANYTHING] else " . some historians [PERSON] have commented on a romantic impulse [EVENT] behind disraeli [PERSON] 's approach [OPPORTUNITY] to empire [STATE] and foreign affairs [PLACE] : abbott [PERSON] writes , " to the mystical tory concepts [PERSON] of throne [EVENT] , church [PERSON] , aristocracy [SET] and people [HUMAN GROUP] , disraeli [PERSON] added empire [STATE] . " others [UNKNOWN] have identified a strongly pragmatic aspect [INSTANCE] to his policies [RULE] . gladstone [PERSON] 's biographer philip magnus [PERSON] contrasted disraeli [PERSON] 's grasp [EVENT] of foreign affairs [PLACE] with that of gladstone [PERSON] , who [UNKNOWN] " never understood that high moral principles [PERSON] , in their application [ACT] to foreign policy [RULE] , are more [PLACE] often destructive of political stability [CONDITION] than motives [POWER] of national self-interest . " in parry [PERSON] 's view [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] 's foreign policy [RULE] " can be seen as a gigantic castle [PERSON] in the air [AIR] ( as it was by gladstone [PERSON] ) , or as an overdue attempt [ACTION] to force [FORCE] the british [UNKNOWN] commercial classes [UNKNOWN] to awaken to the realities [PERSON] of european politics [ACTION] . " during his lifetime [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] 's opponents [PERSON] , and sometimes even his friends [PERSON] and allies [PERSON] , questioned whether he sincerely held the views [PERSON] he propounded , or whether they were adopted by him as politically essential and lacked conviction [ACT] . lord john manners [PERSON] , in 1843 at the time [PERIOD] of young england [PLACE] , wrote , " could i only satisfy myself that d'israeli [PERSON] believed all that he said , i should be more [PLACE] happy : his historical views [PERSON] are quite mine , but does he believe them ? " paul smith [PERSON] , in his journal article [ARTICLE] on disraeli [PERSON] 's politics [ACTION] , argues [UNKNOWN] that disraeli [PERSON] 's ideas [ACT] were coherently argued over a political career [NUMBER] of nearly half [PLACE] a century [PERIOD] , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag [UNKNOWN] of burglar [PERSON] 's tools [TOOL] for effecting felonious entry [PERSON] to the british [UNKNOWN] political pantheon [PERSON] . " external videos video [NUMBER] icon booknotes interview [PERSON] with stanley weintraub [PERSON] on disraeli [PERSON] : a biography [SEQUENCE] , february [PERIOD] 6 , 1994 , c-span stanley weintraub [PERSON] , in his biography [SEQUENCE] of disraeli [PERSON] , points out that his subject [ABILITY] did much to advance [EVENT] britain [PLACE] towards the 20th century [PERIOD] , carrying one of the two great reform acts [ACT] of the 19th despite the opposition [EVENT] of his liberal [PERSON] rival [PERSON] , gladstone [PERSON] . he helped preserve constitutional monarchy [PLACE] by drawing the queen [PERSON] out of mourning into a new [PLACE] symbolic national role [ROLE] and created the climate [STUDY] for what became ' tory democracy [QUALITY] ' . he articulated an imperial role [ROLE] for britain [PLACE] that would last [UNKNOWN] into world war [EVENT] ii and brought an intermittently self-isolated britain [PLACE] into the concert [AGREEMENT] of europe [PLACE] . frances [UNKNOWN] walsh comments [EVENT] on disraeli [PERSON] 's multifaceted public [UNKNOWN] life [EVENT] : the debate [STATE] about his place [PLACE] in the conservative [PERSON] pantheon [PERSON] has continued since his death [EVENT] . disraeli [PERSON] fascinated and divided contemporary opinion [TRUST] ; he was seen by many , including some members [PERSON] of his own party [FORCE] , as an adventurer [PERSON] and a charlatan [PERSON] and by others [UNKNOWN] as a far-sighted and patriotic statesman [PERSON] . as an actor [PERSON] on the political stage [STAGE] he played many roles [ROLE] : byronic hero [PERSON] , man [PERSON] of letters [PURPOSE] , social critic , parliamentary virtuoso [PERSON] , squire [PERSON] of hughenden [UNKNOWN] , royal companion [PERSON] , european statesman [PERSON] . his singular and complex personality [SET] has provided historians [PERSON] and biographers [PERSON] with a particularly stiff challenge [ACTION] . historian llewellyn woodward [PERSON] has evaluated disraeli [PERSON] : disraeli [PERSON] 's political ideas [ACT] have not stood the test [EFFECT] of time. ... his detachment [UNIT] from english [EVENT] prejudices [PERSON] did not give him any particular insight [COGNITIVE STATE] into foreign affairs [PLACE] ; as a young man [PERSON] he accepted the platitudes [STATEMENT] of metternich [PERSON] and failed to understand the meaning [PURPOSE] of the nationalist movements [UNKNOWN] in europe [PLACE] . the imperialism [PLACE] of his later years [PERIOD] was equally superficial : an interpretation [EVENT] of politics [ACTION] without economics [UNKNOWN] . disraeli [PERSON] liked to think of himself in terms [TERM] of pure intellect [FORM] , but his politics [ACTION] were more [PLACE] personal than intellectual in character [FORCE] . he had far-reaching schemes [CONDITION] but little administrative ability [ABILITY] , and there was some foundation [SUBSTANCE] for napoleon ill [PERSON] 's judgement [UNKNOWN] that he was ' like all literary men [PERSON] , from chateaubriand [PERSON] to guizot [PERSON] , ignorant of the world'.... in spite [EVENT] of these faults [QUANTITY] . . . disraeli [PERSON] 's courage [PERSON] , quickness [STATE] of wit [PLACE] , capacity [STATUS] for affection [EMOTION] , and freedom [PERSON] from sordid motives [POWER] earned him his position [POSITION] . his ambition [EVENT] was of the nobler sort [TENDENCY] . he brought politics nearer [PART] to poetry [ABILITY] , or , at all events [PLACE] , to poetical prose [ABSTRACT ENTITY] , than any english [EVENT] politician [PERSON] since burke [PERSON] . historical writers [PERSON] have often played disraeli [PERSON] and gladstone [PERSON] against each other as great rivals [GROUP] . roland quinault [PERSON] , however , cautions [ELEMENT] not to exaggerate the confrontation [ACT] : they were not direct antagonists [PERSON] for most of their political careers [NUMBER] . indeed initially they were both loyal to the tory party [FORCE] , the church [PERSON] and the landed interest [ELEMENT] . although their paths [PLACE] diverged over the repeal [ACT] of the corn laws [PERSON] in 1846 and later over fiscal policy [RULE] more [PLACE] generally , it was not until the later 1860s that their differences [STATE] over parliamentary reform [AMOUNT] , irish [PERSON] and church policy [RULE] assumed great partisan significance [PURPOSE] . even then their personal relations [RELATION] remained fairly cordial until their dispute [DISPUTE] over the eastern question [QUESTION] in the later 1870s . role [ROLE] of his jewishness [PROPERTY] further information [INFORMATION] : history [UNIT] of the jews [PERSON] in england [PLACE] by 1882 , 46,000 jews [PERSON] lived in england [PLACE] , and by 1890 , jewish [UNKNOWN] emancipation [ACT] was complete . since 1858 , parliament [HUMAN GROUP] has never been without practicing jewish [UNKNOWN] members [PERSON] . the first jewish [UNKNOWN] lord mayor [HUMAN ROLE] of london [PLACE] , sir david salomons [PERSON] , was elected in 1855 , followed by the 1858 emancipation [ACT] of the jews [PERSON] . on 26 july [PERIOD] 1858 , lionel de rothschild [PERSON] was allowed to sit in the house [PLACE] of commons [UNKNOWN] when the hitherto [UNKNOWN] specifically christian [PERSON] oath [ASSET] of office [PLACE] was changed . disraeli [PERSON] , a baptised christian [PERSON] of jewish [UNKNOWN] parentage [STATE] , was already an mp , as the mandated oath [ASSET] of office [PLACE] presented no barrier [ACT] to him . in 1884 nathan mayer rothschild [PERSON] , 1st baron rothschild [PERSON] , became the first jewish [UNKNOWN] member [PERSON] of the british house [PLACE] of lords [PERSON] ; disraeli [PERSON] was already a member [PERSON] . as a leader [PERSON] of the conservative party [FORCE] , which had ties [PERSON] to the landed aristocracy [SET] , disraeli [PERSON] used his jewish [UNKNOWN] ancestry [PERSON] to claim an aristocratic heritage [UNKNOWN] of his own . his biographer jonathan parry [PERSON] argues [UNKNOWN] : disraeli [PERSON] convinced himself ( wrongly ) that he derived from the sephardi aristocracy [SET] of iberian jews [PERSON] driven from spain [PLACE] at the end [UNKNOWN] of the fifteenth century [PERIOD] . . ..presenting himself as jewish [UNKNOWN] symbolized disraeli [PERSON] 's uniqueness [STATE] when he was fighting for respect [EVENT] , and explained his set-backs . presenting jewishness [PROPERTY] as aristocratic and religious legitimized his claim to understand the perils [SITUATION] facing modern england [PLACE] and to offer [OFFER] ' national ' solutions [ACT] to them . english [EVENT] toryism [CONCEPT] was ' copied from the mighty prototype [DOCUMENT] ' ( coningsby [UNKNOWN] , bk 4 , chap. 15 ) . disraeli [PERSON] was thus able to square his jewishness [PROPERTY] with his equally deep attachment [STATE] to england [PLACE] and her history [UNIT] . todd endelman [PERSON] points out that " the link [ELEMENT] between jews [PERSON] and old clothes [EVENT] was so fixed in the popular imagination [ABILITY] that victorian [PERSON] political cartoonists [PERSON] regularly drew benjamin disraeli [PERSON] [PERSON] as an old clothes man [PERSON] in order [GARMENT] to stress his jewishness [PROPERTY] . " he adds [PERSON] , " before the 1990s...few biographers [PERSON] of disraeli [PERSON] or historians [PERSON] of victorian politics [ACTION] acknowledged the prominence [DISTANCE] of the antisemitism [CONCEPT] that accompanied his climb [FORCE] up the greasy pole [PERSON] or its role [ROLE] in shaping his own singular sense [EVENT] of jewishness [PROPERTY] . " according to michael ragussis [PERSON] : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks [ACT] aimed at him by the crowds [GROUP] in his early electioneering [ACTIVITY] became in the 1870s a kind [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of national scrutiny [ACT] of his jewishness [PROPERTY] — a scrutiny [ACT] that erupted into a kind [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of anti-semitic attack [EVENT] led by some of the most prominent [ACT] intellectuals [PERSON] and politicians [PERSON] of the time [PERIOD] and anchored in the charge [AMOUNT] that disraeli [PERSON] was a crypto-jew . popular culture disraeli [PERSON] , the first person [PERSON] caricatured in the london magazine [PLACE] vanity fair [PERSON] , 30 january [PERIOD] 1869 . caricatures [UNKNOWN] led to a rapid increase [INCREASE] in demand [EVENT] for the magazine [PLACE] . in 1929 , actor george [PERSON] arliss [PERSON] won the oscar [PERSON] for personifying disraeli [PERSON] 's " paternalistic [UNKNOWN] , kindly , homely statesmanship [SKILL] " . historian michael diamond [PERSON] asserts that for british music hall patrons [PERSON] in the 1880s and 1890s , " xenophobia [EVENT] and pride [PERSON] in empire [STATE] " were reflected in the halls [PERSON] ' most popular political heroes [UNKNOWN] : all were conservatives [UNKNOWN] and disraeli [PERSON] stood out above all , even decades [UNKNOWN] after his death [EVENT] , while gladstone [PERSON] was used as a villain [PERSON] . film historian roy armes [PERSON] has argued that historical films [EVENT] helped maintain the political status [STATUS] quo in britain [PLACE] in the 1920s and 1930s by imposing an establishment [EVENT] viewpoint [POSITION] that emphasized the greatness [STATE] of monarchy [PLACE] , empire [STATE] , and tradition [STYLE] . the films [EVENT] created " a facsimile world [PLACE] where existing values [VALUE] were invariably validated by events [PLACE] in the film [ARTWORK] and where all discord [SOUND] could be turned into harmony [PERSON] by an acceptance [PURPOSE] of the status [STATUS] quo " . steven fielding [PERSON] has argued that disraeli [PERSON] was an especially popular film hero [PERSON] : " historical dramas [STATE] favoured disraeli [PERSON] over gladstone [PERSON] and , more [PLACE] substantively , promulgated an essentially deferential view [PERSON] of democratic leadership [PERSON] . " stage [STAGE] and screen actor george [PERSON] arliss [PERSON] [PERSON] was known for his portrayals [RESULT] of disraeli [PERSON] , winning the academy award [ACT] for best actor [PERSON] for 1929 's disraeli [PERSON] . fielding says arliss [PERSON] " personified the kind [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of paternalistic [UNKNOWN] , kindly , homely statesmanship [SKILL] that appealed to a significant proportion [STATEMENT] of the cinema audience [EVENT] ... even workers [UNKNOWN] attending labour party [FORCE] meetings [ACTIVITY] deferred to leaders [PERSON] with an elevated social background [INFORMATION] who [UNKNOWN] showed they cared . " john gielgud [PERSON] portrayed disraeli [PERSON] in 1941 , in thorold dickinson [PERSON] 's morale-boosting film [ARTWORK] the prime minister [HUMAN ROLE] , which followed the politician [PERSON] from the age [PROPERTY] of 30 to that of 70 . alec guinness [PERSON] portrayed him in the mudlark [UNKNOWN] ( 1950 ) . ian mcshane [PERSON] starred in the four-part 1978 atv miniseries disraeli [PERSON] : portrait [PERSON] of a romantic , written by david butler [PERSON] . presented in the u.s. on pbs [UNKNOWN] 's masterpiece [UNKNOWN] theatre in 1980 , it was nominated for the emmy award [ACT] for outstanding limited series [SERIES] . richard pasco [PLACE] played disraeli [PERSON] in the itv series [SERIES] number [NUMBER] 10 in 1983 . in the 1997 film mrs [UNKNOWN] brown [PERSON] , disraeli [PERSON] was played by antony sher [PERSON] . works [UNKNOWN] part of a series [SERIES] on conservatism variants [ABILITY] * authoritarian [PERSON] * corporatist * cultural * fiscal * green [PERSON] * liberal [PERSON] * libertarian * moderate * national * paternalistic [UNKNOWN] * populist * pragmatic * progressive * reactionary * religious * social * traditionalist * ultra principles [PERSON] * ancestral worship [PERSON] * authority [STATUS] + traditional [UNKNOWN] * balance [GARMENT] of power [POWER] * class collaboration [PERSON] * collective identity [PERSON] * cultural heritage [UNKNOWN] * cultural values [VALUE] * culture [PERSON] of life [EVENT] + pro-life * discipline [DISCIPLINE] * duty [ATTITUDE] * elitism [TRUST] + aristocracy [SET] + meritocracy [GROUP] + noblesse oblige [UNKNOWN] * ethical order [GARMENT] * familialism [CONCEPT] * family [HUMAN GROUP] as a state model [STYLE] * family [HUMAN GROUP] values [VALUE] * fundamentalism [PERSON] * gender roles [ROLE] + complementarianism [CONCEPT] + essentialism [CONCEPT] * historism [CONCEPT] * honour [UNKNOWN] * imperialism [PLACE] * law [PERSON] and order [GARMENT] * loyalty [STATE] * maternalism [CONCEPT] * monarchism [CONCEPT] + royalism [CONCEPT] * moral absolutism [ABILITY] * natalism [CONCEPT] * nationalism [SET] * natural law [PERSON] * norms [STATE] + customs [EVENT] + mores [SET] * ordered liberty [PERSON] * organicism [CONCEPT] * organised religion [UNKNOWN] * orthodoxy * patriotism [EVENT] * peace [EVENT] through strength [PERSON] * property rights [UNKNOWN] * public [UNKNOWN] morality [EVENT] * rule [RULE] of law [PERSON] * social hierarchy [UNKNOWN] * social institutions [INSTITUTION] * social order [GARMENT] * sovereignty [PLACE] * state [STATE] religion [UNKNOWN] * stewardship [RANK] * subsidiarity [RULE] * tradition intellectuals [PERSON] * johnson [PERSON] * hume [PERSON] * burke [PERSON] * more [PLACE] * maistre [UNKNOWN] * bonald [PERSON] * chateaubriand [PERSON] * czartoryski * coleridge [PERSON] * karamzin [UNKNOWN] * savigny [UNKNOWN] * carlyle [PERSON] * ranke [PERSON] * newman * tocqueville * dostoevsky * taine [PERSON] * le bon [PERSON] * nordau [PERSON] * belloc [PERSON] * iorga [PERSON] * chesterton [PERSON] * spengler [PERSON] * jabotinsky [PERSON] * ilyin [UNKNOWN] * savarkar [UNKNOWN] * schmitt * eliot [PERSON] * mannheim [PLACE] * jünger [PERSON] * evola [PERSON] * strauss [PERSON] * röpke [UNKNOWN] * gadamer [PERSON] * freyre [PERSON] * voegelin * oakeshott [PERSON] * burnham [PERSON] * lefebvre [PERSON] * qutb [UNKNOWN] * kuehnelt-leddihn * gómez dávila [PERSON] * kirk * solzhenitsyn [PERSON] * koselleck [PERSON] * mishima [PERSON] * buckley * sowell * mansfield [PERSON] * scruton [PERSON] * hoppe [PERSON] * dugin [UNKNOWN] * peterson politicians [PERSON] * adams [PERSON] * pitt [PERSON] * canning * metternich [PERSON] * disraeli [PERSON] * bismarck [FOOD] * salisbury [PERSON] * dmowski [UNKNOWN] * mannerheim * baldwin [PERSON] * maurras [UNKNOWN] * horthy [PLACE] * metaxas [PERSON] * churchill [PERSON] * adenauer [PERSON] * de gasperi [PERSON] * chiang [PLACE] * salazar [PLACE] * de gaulle [UNKNOWN] * dollfuss [PLACE] * franco * khomeini * reagan * powell * pinochet [PERSON] * marcos [PERSON] * park [PLACE] * smith [PERSON] * reza shah [PERSON] * suharto * lee [PERSON] * zia [PERSON] * vajpayee [UNKNOWN] * thatcher [PERSON] * kohl [PERSON] * fujimori [PERSON] * bush [PERSON] * trump * kaczyński * netanyahu [PERSON] * modi [PERSON] * putin [UNKNOWN] * abe [PERSON] * bolsonaro [UNKNOWN] * orbán [PERSON] * meloni religion [UNKNOWN] * christian [PERSON] democracy [QUALITY] * christian [PERSON] right [UNKNOWN] * confucianism [CONCEPT] * hindutva [UNKNOWN] * islamism [CONCEPT] * jewish [UNKNOWN] conservatism [ATTITUDE] + religious zionism [CONCEPT] * theravada buddhism [PERSON] * traditionalist catholicism [PROPERTY] + integralism [CONCEPT] + ultramontanism [CONCEPT] * traditionalist school [INSTITUTION] personal variants [ABILITY] * berlusconism [CONCEPT] * bukelism [CONCEPT] * cameronism [CONCEPT] * chiangism [CONCEPT] * erdoğanism [CONCEPT] * francoism [CONCEPT] * fujimorism [CONCEPT] * gaullism [CONCEPT] * janismo [UNKNOWN] * kaczyzm [UNKNOWN] * maurrassisme [UNKNOWN] * mellismo * metaxism [CONCEPT] * powellism [CONCEPT] * pinochetism [CONCEPT] * putinism [CONCEPT] * qutbism [CONCEPT] + khomeinism [CONCEPT] * reaganism [CONCEPT] * sarkozysm [UNKNOWN] * thatcherism [CONCEPT] * trumpism [CONCEPT] * ziaism national variants [ABILITY] * australia [PLACE] * austria [PLACE] * bangladesh * belgium [PLACE] * belize [PLACE] * brazil [PLACE] * canada [PLACE] * chile [PLACE] * china [PLACE] + hong kong [PERSON] * colombia [PLACE] * cuba [PLACE] * denmark [PLACE] * finland [PLACE] * france [PLACE] * germany [PLACE] * greece [PLACE] * guatemala [PLACE] * hungary [PLACE] * iceland [PLACE] * india [PLACE] * iran * israel * italy [PLACE] * japan * luxembourg [PLACE] * malaysia [PLACE] * mexico [PLACE] * netherlands [PLACE] * new zealand [PLACE] * norway [PLACE] * pakistan [PLACE] * panama [PLACE] * peru [PLACE] * poland [PLACE] * russia [PLACE] * serbia [PLACE] * singapore [PLACE] * sweden [PLACE] * switzerland * south korea [PLACE] * taiwan [PLACE] * turkey [PLACE] * ukraine [PLACE] * united kingdom [PLACE] * united states related ideologies [PLACE] * agrarianism [CONCEPT] * clerical fascism [EVENT] * communitarianism [CONCEPT] * conservative [PERSON] liberalism [BODY] * corporatism [CONCEPT] * ordoliberalism [CONCEPT] related topics [EVENT] * anti-communism + white terror [INSTANCE] * anti-gender movement [HUMAN GROUP] * anti-immigration * black conservatism [ATTITUDE] + us * catholic [PERSON] social teaching [ACT] * clericalism [CONCEPT] * conservative [PERSON] feminism [PERSON] * conservative [PERSON] socialism [GROUP] * conservative [PERSON] wave [WAVE] * hispanic conservatism [ATTITUDE] + us * lgbt conservatism [ATTITUDE] * natcon [UNKNOWN] * nativism [CONCEPT] * para-fascism * patriarchy [PERSON] + patriarchalism [CONCEPT] * radical [PERSON] right [UNKNOWN] + europe [PLACE] + us * right [UNKNOWN] realism * right-wing politics [ACTION] + alt [SOUND] + authoritarianism [PERSON] + centre [UNKNOWN] + dictatorship [EVENT] + far [UNKNOWN] + new [PLACE] * small-c conservative [PERSON] * toryism [CONCEPT] * conservatism [ATTITUDE] portal * icon politics [ACTION] portal * v * t * e novels [UNKNOWN] * vivian grey [PERSON] ( 1826 , revised 1853 ) * popanilla [UNKNOWN] ( 1828 ) * the young duke [PERSON] ( 1831 , revised 1853 ) * contarini [PERSON] fleming ( 1832 ) * ixion [UNKNOWN] in heaven [PERSON] ( 1832-33 ) * the wondrous tale [PERSON] of alroy [PERSON] ( 1833 ) - heavily revised as alroy [PERSON] : a romance [PERSON] ( 1846 and 1871 ) * the rise [PERSON] of iskander [PERSON] ( 1833 ) * the infernal marriage [EVENT] ( unfinished ; 1834 ) * a year [PERIOD] at hartlebury [UNKNOWN] , or the election [POWER] - with sarah disraeli [PERSON] ( 1834 ) * henrietta temple [PERSON] ( 1837 ) * venetia [PERSON] ( 1837 ) * lothair [PERSON] ( 1870 ) * endymion [PERSON] ( 1880 ) * falconet [PERSON] ( unfinished , 1881 ; posthumously published in 1905 ) young england [PLACE] trilogy [SET] 1 . coningsby [UNKNOWN] , or the new generation [PLACE] ( 1844 ) 2 . sybil [PERSON] , or the two nations [PERSON] ( 1845 ) 3. tancred [PERSON] , or the new crusade [PLACE] ( 1847 ) poetry [ABILITY] * the revolutionary epick [UNKNOWN] ( 1834 ) drama [STATE] * the tragedy [SITUATION] of count alarcos [PERSON] ( 1839 ) non-fiction * an inquiry [ACT] into the plans [UNKNOWN] , progress [ACTION] , and policy [RULE] of the american [PLACE] mining companies [UNKNOWN] ( 1825 ) * lawyers [PERSON] and legislators [UNKNOWN] : or , notes [UNKNOWN] , on the american [PLACE] mining companies [UNKNOWN] ( 1825 ) * the present state [STATE] of mexico [PLACE] ( 1825 ) * england [PLACE] and france [PLACE] , or a cure [ELEMENT] for the ministerial gallomania [UNKNOWN] ( 1832 ) * what is he ? ( 1833 ) * the vindication [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of the english constitution [PERSON] ( 1835 ) * the letters [PURPOSE] of runnymede [UNKNOWN] ( 1836 ) * lord george [PERSON] bentinck [PERSON] ( 1852 ) arms caption [CONDITION] : coat [ABSTRACT ENTITY] of arms [LANGUAGE] of benjamin disraeli [PERSON] crest issuant [PERSON] from a wreath [BODY] of oak [PERSON] proper a castle [PERSON] triple-towered argent [PERSON] . escutcheon [UNKNOWN] per saltire gules [UNKNOWN] and argent [PERSON] a castle [PERSON] triple-towered in chief [PERSON] argent [PERSON] two lions [PERSON] rampant in fess sable [PERSON] and an eagle [PERSON] displayed in base [ABSTRACT ENTITY] or . supporters dexter [PERSON] an eagle [PERSON] or sinister a lion [PERSON] or each gorged with a collar gules [UNKNOWN] and pendent [UNKNOWN] therefrom an escutcheon [UNKNOWN] of the last [UNKNOWN] charged with a tower argent [PERSON] . motto forti nihili difficile notes [UNKNOWN] and references

Objects found

Id Form Freq Tag Context Error
1disraeli321PERSON " disraeli " redirects here .
2gladstone48PERSON in office 20 february 1874 - 21 april 1880 monarch victoria preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone
3government37GOVERNMENT at the urging of george canning the british government recognised the new independent governments of argentina ( 1824 ) , colombia and mexico ( both 1825 ) .
4office35PLACE in office 20 february 1874 - 21 april 1880 monarch victoria preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone
5commons31UNKNOWN after several unsuccessful attempts , disraeli entered the house of commons in 1837 .
6derby31PERSON in office 27 february 1868 - 1 december 1868 monarch victoria preceded by the earl of derby succeeded by william ewart gladstone leader of the opposition
7party30FORCE the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
8parliament30HUMAN GROUP there had been members of parliament ( mps ) from jewish families since sampson gideon in 1770 .
9britain29PLACE in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
10conservatives28UNKNOWN he made the conservatives the party most identified with the british empire and military action to expand it , both of which were popular among british voters .
11queen27PERSON he maintained a close friendship with queen victoria who , in 1876 , elevated him to the peerage as earl of beaconsfield .
12election25POWER upon derby 's retirement in 1868 , disraeli became prime minister briefly before losing that year 's general election .
13house23PLACE after several unsuccessful attempts , disraeli entered the house of commons in 1837 .
14cabinet18EVENT when disraeli attempted to secure a tory-radical cabinet in 1852 , bright refused .
15england18PLACE the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
16time18PERIOD disraeli was born in bloomsbury , at that time a part of middlesex .
17liberals18PERSON with gladstone conducting a massive speaking campaign , the liberals defeated disraeli 's conservatives at the 1880 general election .
18palmerston17UNKNOWN after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
19prime minister16HUMAN ROLE prime minister of the united kingdom ( 1868 ; 1874-1880 )
20years16PERIOD two years later or so— the exact date has not been ascertained— he was sent as a boarder to rev john potticary 's school at blackheath .
21minister16HUMAN ROLE prime minister of the united kingdom ( 1868 ; 1874-1880 )
22chancellor14PERSON in office 1 december 1868 - 17 february 1874 monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone chancellor of the exchequer
23man14PERSON three portraits ; a man and two women disraeli 's father , mother and sister —
24year14PERIOD upon derby 's retirement in 1868 , disraeli became prime minister briefly before losing that year 's general election .
25salisbury14PERSON in office 21 april 1880 - 19 april 1881 monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone preceded by marquess of hartington succeeded by the marquess of salisbury
26life14EVENT early life childhood disraeli was born on 21 december 1804 at 6
27leader13PERSON in office 27 february 1868 - 1 december 1868 monarch victoria preceded by the earl of derby succeeded by william ewart gladstone leader of the opposition
28opposition13EVENT in office 27 february 1868 - 1 december 1868 monarch victoria preceded by the earl of derby succeeded by william ewart gladstone leader of the opposition
29majority13PROPERTY he returned to the opposition before leading the party to a majority in the 1874 general election .
30father12PERSON his father left judaism after a dispute at his synagogue ; benjamin became an anglican at the age of 12 .
31career12NUMBER isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
32russia12PLACE disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
33church12PERSON following a quarrel in 1813 with the bevis marks synagogue , his father renounced judaism and had the four children baptised into the church of england in july and august 1817 .
34earl12PERSON the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
35support12ACT controversial wars in afghanistan and south africa undermined his public support .
36british12UNKNOWN lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
37peel12PERSON in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
38death12EVENT the tour was cut short suddenly by meredith 's death from smallpox in cairo in july 1831 .
39london12PLACE the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
40lords12PERSON the whigs derived from the coalition of lords who had forced through the bill of rights 1689 and in some cases were their descendants .
41tories11UNKNOWN the tories tended to support king and church and sought to thwart political change .
42april11PERIOD in office 20 february 1874 - 21 april 1880 monarch victoria preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone
43politics11ACTION conversion enabled disraeli to contemplate a career in politics .
44policy11RULE domestic policy legislation
45victoria11PLACE in office 20 february 1874 - 21 april 1880 monarch victoria preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone
46bill11PERSON he had already turned his attention to politics in 1832 , during the great crisis over the reform bill .
47russell11PERSON the tories remained split , and the queen sent for lord john russell , the whig leader .
48berlin11PLACE in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
49corn laws11PERSON in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
50isaac10PLACE isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
51march10PERIOD after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
52july10PERIOD in office 6 july 1866 - 29
53affairs10PLACE disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
54speech10SPEECH disraeli made his maiden speech in parliament on 7 december 1837 .
55war10EVENT the start of the crimean war in 1854 caused a lull in party politics ;
56december10PERIOD in office 27 february 1868 - 1 december 1868 monarch victoria preceded by the earl of derby succeeded by william ewart gladstone leader of the opposition
57india10PLACE when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
58russians10UNKNOWN the prime minister wanted a deal with the ottomans whereby britain would temporarily occupy strategic areas to deter the russians from war , to be returned on the signing of a peace treaty , but found little support in his cabinet , which favoured partition of the ottoman empire .
59europe10PLACE this diplomatic victory established disraeli as one of europe 's leading statesmen .
60jews9PERSON however , until the jews relief act 1858 , mps were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
61february9PERIOD in office 20 february 1874 - 21 april 1880 monarch victoria preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone
62power9POWER disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
63leadership9PERSON tory politician with experience of office followed peel , leaving the rump bereft of leadership .
64january9PERIOD in january 1874 , gladstone called a general election , convinced that if he waited longer , he would do worse at the polls .
65novels9UNKNOWN disraeli wrote novels throughout his career , beginning in 1826 , and published his last completed novel , endymion , shortly before he died at the age of 76 .
66interest8ELEMENT disraeli arranged for the british to purchase a major interest in the suez canal company in egypt .
67term8TERM disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
68coningsby8UNKNOWN venetia * coningsby * sybil * tancred *
69legislation8PERSON after peace was restored , and palmerston in early 1858 brought in legislation for direct rule of india by the crown , disraeli opposed it .
70queen victoria8PERSON he maintained a close friendship with queen victoria who , in 1876 , elevated him to the peerage as earl of beaconsfield .
71congress8ACTIVITY in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
72work8ACTIVITY released from the law , disraeli did some work for murray , but turned most of his attention to speculative dealing on the stock exchange .
73reform8AMOUNT he had already turned his attention to politics in 1832 , during the great crisis over the reform bill .
74hughenden8UNKNOWN while these intrigues played out , disraeli was working with the bentinck family to secure the necessary financing to purchase hughenden manor , in buckinghamshire .
75role8ROLE he played a central role in the creation of the modern conservative party , defining its policies and its broad outreach .
76premiership7POSITION palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
77wife7PERSON isaac and his wife retained the older form .
78bulgaria7PLACE balkans and bulgaria cavalry wielding sabres fight men with guns on foot fight in
79session7PERIOD after this unpromising start disraeli kept a low profile for the rest of the parliamentary session .
80murray7PERSON he had made a tentative start : in may 1824 he submitted a manuscript to his father 's friend , the publisher john murray , but withdrew it before murray could decide whether to publish it .
81defeat7BODY he did not defeat the incumbent whig member , henry labouchere , but the taunton constituency was regarded as unwinnable by the tories .
82whigs7LIQUID the whigs derived from the coalition of lords who had forced through the bill of rights 1689 and in some cases were their descendants .
83book7ENTITY disraeli , then just 23 , did not move in high society , as the numerous solecisms in his book made obvious .
84people7HUMAN GROUP just fit now , after being twice discarded by the people , to become a conservative .
85blake7PERSON although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
86shares7ACTION there was at the time a boom in shares in south american mining companies .
87canal7PERSON disraeli arranged for the british to purchase a major interest in the suez canal company in egypt .
88policies7RULE he played a central role in the creation of the modern conservative party , defining its policies and its broad outreach .
89novel7EVENT disraeli wrote novels throughout his career , beginning in 1826 , and published his last completed novel , endymion , shortly before he died at the age of 76 .
90conservative party7FORCE he played a central role in the creation of the modern conservative party , defining its policies and its broad outreach .
91men7PERSON murray and lockhart , men of great influence in literary circles , believed that disraeli had caricatured them and abused their confidence—an accusation denied by the author but repeated by many of his biographers .
92empire7STATE he made the conservatives the party most identified with the british empire and military action to expand it , both of which were popular among british voters .
93bentinck7PERSON bright , peel , bentinck and stanley disraeli gradually became a sharp critic of peel 's government , often deliberately taking contrary positions .
94nations7PERSON other european nations , faced with similar circumstances , opted for protection , and disraeli was urged to reinstitute the corn laws .
95repeal7ACT in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
96money6MONEY with no money of his own , disraeli borrowed money to invest .
97left6UNKNOWN his father left judaism after a dispute at his synagogue ; benjamin became an anglican at the age of 12 .
98august6PERIOD following a quarrel in 1813 with the bevis marks synagogue , his father renounced judaism and had the four children baptised into the church of england in july and august 1817 .
99friend6PERSON isaac 's friend sharon turner , a solicitor , convinced him that although he could comfortably remain unattached to any formal religion it would be disadvantageous to the children if they did so .
100benjamin6PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
101exchequer6AMOUNT in office 1 december 1868 - 17 february 1874 monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone chancellor of the exchequer
102sybil6PERSON venetia * coningsby * sybil * tancred *
103mps6UNKNOWN there had been members of parliament ( mps ) from jewish families since sampson gideon in 1770 .
104home6PLACE as the new session of parliament approached in february 1868 , he was unable to leave his home but was reluctant to resign , as at 68 he was much younger than either palmerston or russell at the end of their premierships .
105state6STATE the wondrous tale of alroy the following year portrayed the problems of a medieval jew in deciding between a small , exclusively jewish state and a large empire embracing all .
106title6ACTION at the end of june 1851 , stanley succeeded to the title of earl of derby .
107constantinople6UNKNOWN the khedive governed egypt under the ottoman empire ; as in the crimea , the issue of the canal raised the eastern question of what to do about the decaying empire governed from constantinople .
108jewishness6PROPERTY role of his jewishness further information :
109employers6PERSON although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
110turks6PLACE in july 1875 serb populations in bosnia and herzegovina , then provinces of the ottoman empire , revolted against the turks , alleging religious persecution and poor administration .
111november6PERIOD in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
112debate6STATE after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
113peace6EVENT in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
114votes6EVENT the government was defeated by 19 votes , and derby resigned four days later .
115june6PERIOD february 1858 - 11 june 1859 prime minister
116ottoman empire6STATE disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
117lyndhurst6UNKNOWN croker , lyndhurst , henrietta sykes and lady londonderry
118members6PERSON he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
119battle6PERSON the first months of 1846 were dominated by a battle in parliament between the free traders and the protectionists over the repeal of the corn laws , with the latter rallying around disraeli and lord george bentinck .
120secretary6PERSON lyndhurst was an indiscreet gossip with a fondness for intrigue ; this appealed greatly to disraeli , who became his secretary and go-between .
121vict6UNKNOWN under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
122order6GARMENT bentinck and the leadership peel successfully steered the repeal of the corn laws through parliament and was then defeated by an alliance of his enemies on the issue of irish law and order ; he resigned in june 1846 .
123tory6PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
124politician5PERSON lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
125view5PERSON it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
126lord salisbury5PERSON among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
127classes5UNKNOWN there was a vogue for what was called " silver-fork fiction " — novels depicting aristocratic life , usually by anonymous authors , read by the aspirational middle classes .
128day5PERIOD from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
129views5PERSON disraeli 's political views embraced certain radical policies , particularly electoral reform , and also some tory ones , including protectionism .
130radical5PERSON the choice of a tory publication was regarded as strange by disraeli 's friends and relatives , who thought him more of a radical .
131age5PROPERTY the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
132days5PERIOD from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
133romance5PERSON a friendship developed , but there was no romance .
134action5ACTION he made the conservatives the party most identified with the british empire and military action to expand it , both of which were popular among british voters .
135latter5UNKNOWN t f maples was not only the young disraeli 's employer and a friend of his father , but also his prospective father-in-law : isaac and maples considered that the latter 's only daughter might be a suitable match for benjamin .
136ottomans5PLACE in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
137parry5PERSON disraeli 's biographer jonathan parry writes that the financial failure and personal criticism that disraeli suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger for a serious nervous crisis affecting him over the next four years : " he had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . "
138law5PERSON t f maples was not only the young disraeli 's employer and a friend of his father , but also his prospective father-in law : isaac and maples considered that the latter 's only daughter might be a suitable match for benjamin .
139member5PERSON isaac d'israeli had never taken religion very seriously but had remained a conforming member of the synagogue .
140rest5NUMBER it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
141opponents5PERSON two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
142historians5PERSON historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
143position5POSITION the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
144university5INSTITUTION i have often thought , though i have often regretted the university , that it was much the reverse .
145right5UNKNOWN the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
146country5PLACE he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
147place5PLACE he again offered a place to gladstone , who declined .
148century5PERIOD among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
149health5PROPERTY bradford speculates that " benjamin 's delicate health and his obviously jewish appearance may have had something to do with it . "
150end5UNKNOWN at the end of june 1851 , stanley succeeded to the title of earl of derby .
151peers5PERSON one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
152united kingdom5PLACE prime minister of the united kingdom ( 1868 ; 1874-1880 )
153dispute5DISPUTE his father left judaism after a dispute at his synagogue ; benjamin became an anglican at the age of 12 .
154endymion5PERSON lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
155william ewart gladstone5PERSON in office 20 february 1874 - 21 april 1880 monarch victoria preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone
156ministers5PERSON it is true there is a collision , but it is not a collision between the lords and the people , but between the ministers and the constitution .
157measure5MEASURE indeed , he had objected to murray about croker 's inserting " high tory " sentiment : disraeli remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of reform can issue from my pen . "
158family5HUMAN GROUP the family was mostly from italy , of sephardic jewish mercantile background .
159budget5DOCUMENT PART budget disraeli 's task as chancellor was to devise a budget which would satisfy the protectionist elements who supported the tories , without uniting the free-traders against it .
160beaconsfield5PLACE the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
161opportunity5OPPORTUNITY disraeli regretted this , hoping for an opportunity , however brief , to show himself capable in office .
162aristocracy5SET at that time , british politics were dominated by the aristocracy , with a few powerful commoners .
163turkey5PLACE now we are obliged to work from a new point of departure , and dictate to turkey , who has forfeited all sympathy . "
164religion5UNKNOWN isaac d'israeli had never taken religion very seriously but had remained a conforming member of the synagogue .
165weeks5PERIOD palmerston did so within weeks of parliament 's reassembly on 4 february 1852 , his followers combining with disraeli 's
166events5PLACE world events thereafter moved against the conservatives .
167influence5POWER after that , disraeli 's influence on murray waned , and to his resentment he was sidelined in the affairs of the representative .
168khedive5UNKNOWN built by french interests , 56 % of the stocks in the canal remained in their hands , while 44 % of the stock belonged to isma 'il pasha , the khedive of egypt .
169friends5PERSON two men and two women friends and allies of disraeli in the 1830s : clockwise from top left —
170alroy5PERSON popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
171oath5ASSET however , until the jews relief act 1858 , mps were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
172alliance5STATE disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
173efforts5ACTION as mps prepared to divide , gladstone rose to his feet and began an angry speech , despite the efforts of tory mps to shout him down .
174reform bill5PERSON he had already turned his attention to politics in 1832 , during the great crisis over the reform bill .
175conservatism5ATTITUDE disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
176lord derby5PERSON when lord derby , the party leader , thrice formed governments in the 1850s and 1860s , disraeli served as chancellor of the exchequer and leader of the house of commons .
177o'connell5UNKNOWN daniel o'connell , misled by inaccurate press reports , thought disraeli had slandered him while electioneering at taunton ; he launched an outspoken attack , referring to disraeli as : a reptile ...
178balkans5UNKNOWN in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
179biographers5PERSON from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
180times5UNKNOWN john murray and j. g. lockhart murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with the times .
181kind5ABSTRACT ENTITY the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
182word4WORD a middle-aged man in victorian clothes gladstone in the 1850s disraeli delivered the budget on 3 december 1852 , and prepared to wind up the debate for the government on 16 december—it was customary for the chancellor to have the last word .
183children4PERSON following a quarrel in 1813 with the bevis marks synagogue , his father renounced judaism and had the four children baptised into the church of england in july and august 1817 .
184food4FOOD also enacted were the public health act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the sale of food and drugs act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education act 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict . c. 70 ) .
185attempt4ACTION palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
186months4PERIOD in his final months , disraeli led the conservatives in opposition .
187reports4SYMBOL daniel o'connell , misled by inaccurate press reports , thought disraeli had slandered him while electioneering at taunton ; he launched an outspoken attack , referring to disraeli as : a reptile ...
188france4PLACE whig pamphlet edited by john wilson croker and published by murray entitled england and france : or a cure for ministerial gallomania .
189words4WORD he became , in parry 's words , " aware of values that seemed denied to his insular countrymen .
190maples4PERSON in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
191person4PERSON act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
192protection4ACT disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
193school4INSTITUTION from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
194motives4POWER historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
195vivian grey4PERSON isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
196tour4EVENT the tour was cut short suddenly by meredith 's death from smallpox in cairo in july 1831 .
197letters4PURPOSE once the bill was formally enacted , victoria began signing her letters " victoria r & i " ( latin : regina et imperatrix , queen and empress ) .
198proposal4ABSTRACT ENTITY in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
199bismarck4FOOD in 1862 , disraeli met prussian count otto von bismarck and said of him , " be careful about that man , he means what he says " .
200author4PERSON reviewers were sharply critical on these grounds of both the author and the book .
201interests4ELEMENT in the early 1830s the tories and the interests they represented appeared to be a lost cause .
202imperialism4PLACE before his leadership of the conservative party , imperialism was the province of the liberals , most notably palmerston .
203judaism4CONCEPT his father left judaism after a dispute at his synagogue ; benjamin became an anglican at the age of 12 .
204bishop4PERSON dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
205firm4INSTITUTION in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
206coalition4GROUP the whigs derived from the coalition of lords who had forced through the bill of rights 1689 and in some cases were their descendants .
207mission4PERSON in 1878 the russians sent a mission to kabul ; it was not rejected by the afghans , as the british had hoped .
208young duke4PERSON popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
209may4PERIOD bradford speculates that " benjamin 's delicate health and his obviously jewish appearance may have had something to do with it . "
210character4FORCE it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
211minority4GROUP he resigned , and the queen sent for stanley , who felt that a minority government could do little and would not last long , so russell remained in office .
212failure4STATE disraeli 's biographer jonathan parry writes that the financial failure and personal criticism that disraeli suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger for a serious nervous crisis affecting him over the next four years : " he had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . "
213resignation4EVENT this confused arrangement ended with granby 's resignation in 1851 ; disraeli effectively ignored the two men regardless .
214egypt4PLACE disraeli arranged for the british to purchase a major interest in the suez canal company in egypt .
215henrietta sykes4PERSON croker , lyndhurst , henrietta sykes and lady londonderry
216decades4UNKNOWN his motives were generally assumed to be mercenary , but the couple came to cherish one another , remaining close until she died more than three decades later .
217leaders4PERSON one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
218positions4POSITION bright , peel , bentinck and stanley disraeli gradually became a sharp critic of peel 's government , often deliberately taking contrary positions .
219son4PERSON king 's road , bedford row , bloomsbury , london , the second child and eldest son of isaac d' israeli , a literary critic and historian , and maria ( miriam ) , née basevi .
220affair4PLACE disraeli 's first novel , vivian grey , published anonymously in four volumes in 1826-27 , was a thinly veiled re-telling of the affair of the representative .
221henrietta temple4PERSON the infernal marriage * henrietta temple *
222conspiracy4DOCUMENT PART at the request of the french ambassador , palmerston proposed amending the conspiracy to murder statute to make creating an infernal device a felony .
223others4UNKNOWN he turned to writing , motivated partly by his desperate need for money , and partly by a wish for revenge on murray and others by whom he felt slighted .
224portrait4PERSON the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
225sister4PERSON three portraits ; a man and two women disraeli 's father , mother and sister
226debts4MONEY disraeli could not pay off the last of his debts from this debacle until 1849 .
227honour4UNKNOWN there , he told the gathered crowd , " lord salisbury and i have brought you back peace— but a peace i hope with honour . "
228office february4PERIOD
229funeral4ACTION despite having been offered a state funeral by queen victoria , disraeli 's executors decided against a public procession and funeral , fearing that too large crowds would gather to do him honour .
230benjamin disraeli4PERSON lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
231change4UNKNOWN he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
232opinion4TRUST the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
233eastern question4QUESTION disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
234venetia4PERSON venetia * coningsby * sybil * tancred *
235contarini4PERSON popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
236actions4ACTION although the budget did not contain protectionist features , the opposition was prepared to destroy it— and disraeli 's career as chancellor—in part out of revenge for his actions against peel in 1846 .
237companies4UNKNOWN there was at the time a boom in shares in south american mining companies .
238politicians4PERSON the new paper , the representative , promoted the mines and those politicians who supported them , particularly canning .
239foreign secretary4PERSON lord stanley ( who had succeeded his father , the former prime minister , as earl of derby ) became foreign secretary and sir stafford northcote the chancellor .
240paper4PERSON john murray and j. g. lockhart murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with the times .
241lothair4PERSON lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
242response4ACT he angered farmers by refusing to reinstitute the corn laws in response to poor harvests and cheap imported grain .
243re election4POWER
244hero4PERSON it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
245gentlemen3PLACE when cecil 's father objected , lord robert stated , " i have merely put into print what all the country gentlemen were saying in private . "
246afghanistan3PLACE controversial wars in afghanistan and south africa undermined his public support .
247nation3PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
248stanley3PERSON bright , peel , bentinck and stanley disraeli gradually became a sharp critic of peel 's government , often deliberately taking contrary positions .
249relationship3RELATIONSHIP he had broken off the relationship in late 1836 , distraught that she had taken yet another lover .
250differences3STATE in 1847 a small political crisis removed bentinck from the leadership and highlighted disraeli 's differences with his own party .
251workers3UNKNOWN disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
252treaty3ARTIFACT under palmerston , the war went better , and was ended by the treaty of paris in early 1856 .
253collision3EVENT in the mean time , the whigs bawl that there is a " collision ! "
254duke3PERSON popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
255constituencies3PLACE a small number of radicals , generally from northern constituencies , were the strongest advocates of continuing reform .
256iskander3PERSON the rise of iskander *
257pamphlet3PERSON whig pamphlet edited by john wilson croker and published by murray entitled england and france : or a cure for ministerial gallomania .
258possessions3STATE other ottoman possessions in europe would become independent ; additional territory was to be ceded directly to russia .
259afghans3EVENT in 1878 the russians sent a mission to kabul ; it was not rejected by the afghans , as the british had hoped .
260service3INSTITUTION although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
261act3ACT however , until the jews relief act 1858 , mps were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
262south3PLACE controversial wars in afghanistan and south africa undermined his public support .
263statesman3PERSON lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
264brothers3PERSON he was close to his sister and on affectionate but more distant terms with his surviving brothers .
265administration3PLACE second derby government main article : second derby-disraeli ministry derby took office at the head of a purely " conservative " administration , not in coalition .
266ideas3ACT nevertheless , his biographer robert blake doubts that his subject had specific ideas about foreign policy when he took office in 1874 .
267atrocities3ACT gladstone , who had left the liberal leadership and retired from public life , was appalled by reports of atrocities in bulgaria , and in august 1876 , penned a hastily written pamphlet arguing that the turks should be deprived of bulgaria because of what they had done there .
268condition3CONDITION peel hoped that the repeal of the corn laws and the resultant influx of cheaper wheat into britain would relieve the condition of the poor , and in particular the great famine caused by successive failure of potato crops in ireland .
269isaac d' israeli3PERSON isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
270experience3EFFECT tory politician with experience of office followed peel , leaving the rump bereft of leadership .
271mother3PERSON he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
272peelites3UNKNOWN an alliance of free-trade conservatives ( the " peelites " ) , radicals , and whigs carried repeal , and the conservative party split : the peelites moved towards the whigs , while a " new " conservative party formed around the protectionists , led by disraeli , bentinck , and lord stanley ( later lord derby ) .
273terms3TERM in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
274nature3NATURE although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
275departure3EVENT at his first departure from 10 downing street in 1868 , disraeli had victoria make his wife mary anne viscountess
276progress3ACTION as parry observes , the book ends on a political note , setting out europe 's progress " from feudal to federal principles " .
277seat3PROPERTY disraeli kept labouchere 's majority down to 170 , a good showing that put him in line for a winnable seat in the near future .
278control3GROUP the interruptions were fewer , as gladstone gained control of the house , and in the next two hours painted a picture of disraeli as frivolous and his budget as subversive .
279wondrous tale3PERSON popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
280issue3EVENT indeed , he had objected to murray about croker 's inserting " high tory " sentiment : disraeli remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of reform can issue from my pen . "
281seats3PROPERTY finding the financial demands of his maidstone seat too much , disraeli secured a tory nomination for shrewsbury , winning one of the constituency 's two seats at the 1841 general election , despite serious opposition , and heavy debts which opponents seized on .
282lord john russell3PERSON the tories remained split , and the queen sent for lord john russell , the whig leader .
283scrutiny3ACT in 2007 parry wrote , " the tory democrat myth did not survive detailed scrutiny by professional historical writing of the 1960s demonstrated that disraeli had very little interest in a programme of social legislation and was very flexible in handling parliamentary reform in 1867 . " despite this , parry sees disraeli , rather than peel , as the founder of the modern conservative party .
284hands3PERSON built by french interests , 56 % of the stocks in the canal remained in their hands , while 44 % of the stock belonged to isma 'il pasha , the khedive of egypt .
285rule3RULE when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
286changes3UNKNOWN disraeli made many changes , softening his satire , but the damage to his reputation proved long-lasting .
287result3RESULT as the constituencies voted , it became clear that the result would be a conservative majority , the first since 1841 .
288reforms3PERSON under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
289trade3PERSON though disappointed at being left on the back benches , he continued his support for peel in 1842 and 1843 , seeking to establish himself as an expert on foreign affairs and international trade .
290meeting3ACTIVITY instead , the election later that month had no clear winner , and the derby government held to power pending the meeting of parliament .
291divisions3PERSON a stately-looking gentleman in a dark suit , sitting with a book the earl of derby , prime minister 1852 , 1858-59 , 1866-68 in march 1851 , lord john russell 's government was defeated over a bill to equalise the county and borough franchises , mostly because of divisions among his supporters .
292biography3SEQUENCE further he wrote a discourse on political theory and a political biography , the life of lord george bentinck , which is excellent ... remarkably fair and accurate . "
293charge3AMOUNT he reprimanded frere , but left him in charge , attracting fire from all sides .
294treatment3TREATMENT despite this tragedy , and the need for treatment for a sexually transmitted disease on his return , disraeli felt enriched by his experiences .
295doctors3RESOURCE he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
296farmers3PERSON he angered farmers by refusing to reinstitute the corn laws in response to poor harvests and cheap imported grain .
297attack3EVENT daniel o'connell , misled by inaccurate press reports , thought disraeli had slandered him while electioneering at taunton ; he launched an outspoken attack , referring to disraeli as : a reptile ...
298values3VALUE he became , in parry 's words , " aware of values that seemed denied to his insular countrymen .
299reform act3ACT before the reform act 1867 , the working class did not possess the vote and therefore had little political power .
300start3UNKNOWN he had made a tentative start : in may 1824 he submitted a manuscript to his father 's friend , the publisher john murray , but withdrew it before murray could decide whether to publish it .
301tory party3PERSON the split in the tory party over the repeal of the corn laws had profound implications for disraeli 's political career : almost every
302group3GROUP after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
303rebellion3FORCE when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
304form3FORM isaac and his wife retained the older form .
305churchill3PERSON protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
306scotland3PLACE in addition , the public health ( scotland )
307statesmanship3SKILL foreign policy disraeli always considered foreign affairs to be the most critical and interesting part of statesmanship .
308prince3PERSON public support for disraeli was shown by cheering at a thanksgiving service in 1872 on the recovery of the prince of wales from illness , while gladstone was met with silence .
309crowds3GROUP on his advice , gladstone accepted the offer in january 1879 , and later that year began his midlothian campaign , speaking not only in edinburgh , but across britain , attacking disraeli , to huge crowds .
310increase3INCREASE the tories pursued a reform bill in 1859 , which would have resulted in a modest increase to the franchise .
311lord george bentinck3PERSON the first months of 1846 were dominated by a battle in parliament between the free traders and the protectionists over the repeal of the corn laws , with the latter rallying around disraeli and lord george bentinck .
312illness3ILLNESS derby knew that his " attacks of illness would , at no distant period , incapacitate me from the discharge of my public duties " ; doctors had warned him that his health required his resignation .
313mediterranean3PLACE it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
314minority government3GOVERNMENT he resigned , and the queen sent for stanley , who felt that a minority government could do little and would not last long , so russell remained in office .
315agreement3AGREEMENT act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
316decision3DECISION it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
317tea3PERSON his proposed budget , which he presented to the commons on 3 december , lowered the taxes on malt and tea , provisions designed to appeal to the working class .
318ships3SHIP the suez canal , opened in 1869 , cut weeks and thousands of miles off the sea journey between britain and india ; in 1875 , approximately 80 % of the ships using the canal were british .
319empress3EVENT disraeli cultivated a public image of himself as an imperialist with grand gestures such as conferring on queen victoria the title " empress of india " .
320rise3PERSON the rise of iskander *
321subject3ABILITY nevertheless , his biographer robert blake doubts that his subject had specific ideas about foreign policy when he took office in 1874 .
322united states3PLACE less reticent were palmerston , gladstone , and russell , whose statements in support of the south contributed to years of hard feelings in the united states .
323argent3PERSON arms caption : coat of arms of benjamin disraeli crest issuant from a wreath of oak proper a castle triple-towered argent .
324advance3EVENT in advance of the conference , disraeli sent salisbury private word to seek british military occupation of bulgaria and bosnia , and british control of the ottoman army .
325peerage3COLLECTION he maintained a close friendship with queen victoria who , in 1876 , elevated him to the peerage as earl of beaconsfield .
326need3UNKNOWN he turned to writing , motivated partly by his desperate need for money , and partly by a wish for revenge on murray and others by whom he felt slighted .
327supporters3UNKNOWN disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
328memorial3STATEMENT queen victoria was prostrated with grief , and considered ennobling ralph or coningsby as a memorial to disraeli ( without children , his titles became extinct with his death ) , but decided against it on the ground that their means were too small for a peerage .
329story3PERSON in the same year disraeli published a novel , henrietta temple , which was a love story and social comedy , drawing on his affair with henrietta sykes .
330vote3EVENT before the reform act 1867 , the working class did not possess the vote and therefore had little political power .
331french3PLACE to make his budget revenue-neutral , as funds were needed to provide defences against the french , he doubled the house tax and continued the income tax .
332constituency3PLACE he did not defeat the incumbent whig member , henry labouchere , but the taunton constituency was regarded as unwinnable by the tories .
333high wycombe3PERSON moreover , at the time gallomania was published , disraeli was electioneering in high wycombe in the radical interest .
334class3UNKNOWN sarah bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle class and undramatic as they really were " .
335plans3UNKNOWN political plans were thrown into disarray by palmerston 's death on 18 october 1865 .
336kabul3PLACE in 1878 the russians sent a mission to kabul ; it was not rejected by the afghans , as the british had hoped .
337toryism3CONCEPT the other great party , the whigs , were anathema to disraeli : " toryism is worn out & i cannot condescend to be a whig . "
338crisis3EVENT disraeli 's biographer jonathan parry writes that the financial failure and personal criticism that disraeli suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger for a serious nervous crisis affecting him over the next four years : " he had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . "
339victory3PERSON this diplomatic victory established disraeli as one of europe 's leading statesmen .
340south africa3PLACE controversial wars in afghanistan and south africa undermined his public support .
341friendship3RELATIONSHIP he maintained a close friendship with queen victoria who , in 1876 , elevated him to the peerage as earl of beaconsfield .
342throne3EVENT when parliament assembled , derby 's government was defeated by 13 votes on an amendment to the address from the throne .
343ireland3PLACE peel hoped that the repeal of the corn laws and the resultant influx of cheaper wheat into britain would relieve the condition of the poor , and in particular the great famine caused by successive failure of potato crops in ireland .
344heaven3PERSON popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
345castle3PERSON in parry 's view , disraeli 's foreign policy " can be seen as a gigantic castle in the air ( as it was by gladstone ) , or as an overdue attempt to force the british commercial classes to awaken to the realities of european politics . "
346ixion3UNKNOWN popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
347working classes3UNKNOWN disraeli 's overall purpose was to enact policies which would benefit the working classes , making his party more attractive to them .
348fiction3STATEMENT there was a vogue for what was called " silver-fork fiction " — novels depicting aristocratic life , usually by anonymous authors , read by the aspirational middle classes .
349attention3ELEMENT released from the law , disraeli did some work for murray , but turned most of his attention to speculative dealing on the stock exchange .
350boom3PERSON there was at the time a boom in shares in south american mining companies .
351letter3PURPOSE it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
352new generation3PLACE with coningsby ; or , the new generation ( 1844 ) , disraeli , in blake 's view , " infused the novel genre with political sensibility , espousing the belief that england 's future as a world power depended not on the complacent old guard , but on youthful , idealistic politicians . " sybil ; or , the two nations was less idealistic than coningsby ; the " two nations " of its sub-title referred to the huge economic and social gap between the privileged few and the deprived working classes .
353morning3PERSON john murray and j. g. lockhart murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with the times .
354burke3PERSON in addition to the viscounty bestowed on mary anne disraeli , the earldom of beaconsfield was to have been bestowed on edmund burke in 1797 , but he had died before receiving it .
355granby3PERSON russell , rothschild , manners and granby
356event3EVENT in the event the tory split soon had the party out of office , not regaining power until 1852 .
357daughter3PERSON t f maples was not only the young disraeli 's employer and a friend of his father , but also his prospective father-in-law : isaac and maples considered that the latter 's only daughter might be a suitable match for benjamin .
358conservative3PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
359infernal marriage3EVENT the infernal marriage * henrietta temple *
360series3SERIES the following year he wrote a series of satires on politicians of the day , which he published in the times under the pen-name " runnymede " .
361troops3HUMAN GROUP the cabinet discussed disraeli 's proposal to position indian troops at malta for possible transit to the balkans and call out reserves .
362lionel de rothschild3PERSON in that year 's general election , lionel de rothschild had been returned for the city of london .
363conference3ACT four men international delegates at the constantinople conference : clockwise from top left , saffet pasha ( turkey ) , general ignatieff ( russia ) , lord salisbury ( britain ) and the comte de chaudordy ( france )
364paris3PLACE under palmerston , the war went better , and was ended by the treaty of paris in early 1856 .
365mexico3PLACE at the urging of george canning the british government recognised the new independent governments of argentina ( 1824 ) , colombia and mexico ( both 1825 ) .
366dinner2FOOD owing to his infirmities , disraeli was 45 minutes late for the lord mayor 's dinner at the guild hall in november , at which it is customary that the prime minister speaks .
367legislators2UNKNOWN the queen prevailed upon disraeli to introduce a royal titles bill , and also told of her intent to open parliament in person , which during this time she did only when she wanted something from legislators .
368christian2PERSON however , until the jews relief act 1858 , mps were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
369johnson2PERSON cameron * may * osborne * johnson *
370lord chancellor2PERSON in 1834 he was introduced to the former lord chancellor , lord lyndhurst , by henrietta sykes , wife of sir francis sykes .
371tory mps2PERSON after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
372manchester2PLACE it eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as liverpool and manchester .
373freedom2PERSON the following january , sultan abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by hungarian statesman julius andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in serbia and bulgaria .
374mark2ORGANISATION disraeli 's politics at the time were influenced both by his rebellious streak and his desire to make his mark .
375successes2UNKNOWN others hoped for further russian successes .
376enemies2PERSON bentinck and the leadership peel successfully steered the repeal of the corn laws through parliament and was then defeated by an alliance of his enemies on the issue of irish law and order ; he resigned in june 1846 .
377poor2UNKNOWN he angered farmers by refusing to reinstitute the corn laws in response to poor harvests and cheap imported grain .
378paternalistic2UNKNOWN disraeli hoped to forge a paternalistic tory-radical alliance , but he was unsuccessful .
379expedition2ACT disraeli sent the successful expedition against tewodros
380gules2UNKNOWN per saltire gules and argent a castle triple-towered in chief argent two lions rampant in fess sable and an eagle displayed in base or .
381stewardship2RANK under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
382aftermath2PLACE disraeli wrote two novels in the aftermath of the tour .
383appointments2DECISION for example , disraeli made political appointments to positions previously given to career civil servants .
384chelmsford2PERSON first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
385british empire2STATE he made the conservatives the party most identified with the british empire and military action to expand it , both of which were popular among british voters .
386dissenters2PERSON the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
387suez canal2PLACE disraeli arranged for the british to purchase a major interest in the suez canal company in egypt .
388suez canal company2INSTITUTION disraeli arranged for the british to purchase a major interest in the suez canal company in egypt .
389editor2PERSON dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
390coast2EVENT he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
391appearance2PERSON bradford speculates that " benjamin 's delicate health and his obviously jewish appearance may have had something to do with it . "
392problems2EVENT they conditioned his attitude toward some of the most important political problems which faced him in his later years— especially the eastern question ; they also coloured many of his novels . "
393vacancy2QUANTITY faced with a vacancy , disraeli and derby tried yet again to bring gladstone , still nominally a conservative mp , into the government , hoping to strengthen it .
394love2PERSON in the same year disraeli published a novel , henrietta temple , which was a love story and social comedy , drawing on his affair with henrietta sykes .
395language2LANGUAGE disraeli caused an uproar in the congress by making his opening address in english , rather than in french , hitherto accepted as the international language of diplomacy .
396pride2PERSON too much so ; in the pride of boyish erudition , i edited the idonisian eclogue of theocritus , wh . was privately printed .
397stability2CONDITION he spoke only once there in the 1877 session on the eastern question , stating on 20 february that there was a need for stability in the balkans , and that forcing turkey into territorial concessions would not secure it .
398demand2EVENT disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
399ritualists2PERSON he was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the church of england over to the pope .
400movements2UNKNOWN he favoured low church clergymen in promotion , disliking other movements in anglicanism for political reasons .
401city2PLACE in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
402english2EVENT his vindication of the english constitution , was published in december 1835 .
403biographer2PERSON the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
404lowe2PERSON an old enemy of disraeli , former liberal chancellor robert lowe , alleged during the debate in the commons that two previous prime ministers had refused to introduce such legislation for the queen .
405marriage2EVENT the infernal marriage * henrietta temple *
406addition2PERSON in addition , the public health ( scotland )
407tancred2PERSON venetia * coningsby * sybil * tancred *
408workmen act2ACT disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
409motion2REQUEST the aberdeen government made this a motion of confidence ;
410tragedy2SITUATION despite this tragedy , and the need for treatment for a sexually transmitted disease on his return , disraeli felt enriched by his experiences .
411notes2UNKNOWN dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
412democracy2QUALITY disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
413by election2POWER
414powles2PERSON he became involved with the financier j. d . powles , who was prominent among those encouraging the mining boom .
415movement2HUMAN GROUP he was a loyal supporter of the party leader sir robert peel and his policies , with the exception of a personal sympathy for the chartist movement that most tories did not share .
416vindication2ABSTRACT ENTITY his vindication of the english constitution , was published in december 1835 .
417heritage2UNKNOWN as a leader of the conservative party , which had ties to the landed aristocracy , disraeli used his jewish ancestry to claim an aristocratic heritage of his own .
418ancestry2PERSON it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
419biographer jonathan parry2PERSON disraeli 's biographer jonathan parry writes that the financial failure and personal criticism that disraeli suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger for a serious nervous crisis affecting him over the next four years : " he had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . "
420chief2PERSON disraeli sent general sir garnet wolseley as high commissioner and commander in chief , and cetewayo and the zulus were crushed at the battle of ulundi on 4 july 1879 .
421fall2PERSON with the fall of the government , disraeli and the conservatives returned to the opposition benches .
422synagogue2ACTIVITY his father left judaism after a dispute at his synagogue ; benjamin became an anglican at the age of 12 .
423sort2TENDENCY it reflected anti-catholicism of the sort that was popular in britain , and which fueled support for italian unification ( " risorgimento " ) .
424lord palmerston2PERSON after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
425serbia2PLACE the following january , sultan abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by hungarian statesman julius andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in serbia and bulgaria .
426jew2PERSON the wondrous tale of alroy the following year portrayed the problems of a medieval jew in deciding between a small , exclusively jewish state and a large empire embracing all .
427negotiations2PROCESS the negotiations were complicated by bentinck 's sudden death on 21 september 1848 , but disraeli obtained a loan of £25,000 from bentinck 's brothers lord henry bentinck and lord titchfield .
428beliefs2TRUST whig as hero , is a last exposition of the author 's economic policies and political beliefs .
429protectionists2PERSON the first months of 1846 were dominated by a battle in parliament between the free traders and the protectionists over the repeal of the corn laws , with the latter rallying around disraeli and lord george bentinck .
430amendment2EVENT the liberals were healing the breaches between those who favoured russell and the palmerston loyalists , and in late march 1859 , the government was defeated on a russell-sponsored amendment .
431communications2UNKNOWN with much of the pre-canal trade and communications between britain and india passing through the ottoman empire , britain had done its best to prop up the ottomans against the threat that russia would take constantinople , cutting those communications , and giving russian ships unfettered access to the mediterranean .
432exception2STATEMENT he was a loyal supporter of the party leader sir robert peel and his policies , with the exception of a personal sympathy for the chartist movement that most tories did not share .
433american2PLACE there was at the time a boom in shares in south american mining companies .
434newspapers2UNKNOWN as leader of the house , disraeli resumed his regular reports to queen victoria , who had requested that he include what she " could not meet in newspapers " .
435principles2PERSON as parry observes , the book ends on a political note , setting out europe 's progress " from feudal to federal principles " .
436confidence2EMOTION the aberdeen government made this a motion of confidence ;
437mistake2EVENT it would be a mistake to suppose that the two years and more that i was in the office of our friend were wasted .
438intent2STATE disraeli did not agree , and while he did not seek to reverse the order , his actions often frustrated its intent .
439reaction2PERSON disraeli was cautious in response , as careful soundings of mps brought a negative reaction , and he declined to place such a proposal in the queen 's speech .
440public2UNKNOWN controversial wars in afghanistan and south africa undermined his public support .
441runnymede2UNKNOWN the following year he wrote a series of satires on politicians of the day , which he published in the times under the pen-name " runnymede " .
442side2PLACE he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
443pamphlets2PERSON in 1825 , disraeli wrote three anonymous pamphlets for powles , promoting the companies .
444dizzy2DEVICE " dizzy married me for my money " , his wife said later , " but , if he had the chance again , he would marry me for love . "
445baldwin2PERSON baldwin * macmillan * butler * howard *
446flowers2ARTIFACT at the door of 10 downing street , disraeli received flowers sent by the queen .
447street2PLACE at his first departure from 10 downing street in 1868 , disraeli had victoria make his wife mary anne viscountess
448english constitution2PERSON his vindication of the english constitution , was published in december 1835 .
449favour2PERSON disraeli spoke in favour of the measure , arguing that christianity was " completed judaism " , and asking the house of commons " where is your christianity if you do not believe in their judaism ? " russell and disraeli 's future rival gladstone thought this brave ; the speech was badly received by his own party .
450town2PLACE the name beaconsfield , a town near hughenden , was given to a minor character in vivian grey .
451business2STATE the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
452new crusade2PLACE the last was tancred ; or , the new crusade ( 1847 ) , promoting the church of england 's role in reviving britain 's flagging spirituality .
453bradford2PERSON sarah bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " .
454county2PLACE after this i was with a private tutor for two years in my own county , & my education was severely classical .
455subcontinent2PLACE when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
456task2AMOUNT disraeli impressed murray with his energy and commitment to the project , but he failed in his key task of persuading the eminent writer john gibson lockhart to edit the paper .
457cure2ELEMENT whig pamphlet edited by john wilson croker and published by murray entitled england and france : or a cure for ministerial gallomania .
458cetewayo2UNKNOWN the governor of cape colony , sir bartle frere , believing that the federation could not be accomplished until the native tribes acknowledged british rule , made demands on the zulu and their king , cetewayo , which they were certain to reject .
459figure2FIGURE disraeli clashed with peel in the house of commons , becoming a major figure in the party .
460allies2PERSON two men and two women friends and allies of disraeli in the 1830s : clockwise from top left —
461samuel wilberforce2PERSON civil service disraeli 's failure to appoint samuel wilberforce as bishop of london may have cost him votes in the 1868 election .
462barrister2PERSON on their return to england he left the solicitors , at the suggestion of maples , with the aim of qualifying as a barrister .
463dark2CONDITION a stately-looking gentleman in a dark suit , sitting with a book the earl of derby , prime minister 1852 , 1858-59 , 1866-68 in march 1851 , lord john russell 's government was defeated over a bill to equalise the county and borough franchises , mostly because of divisions among his supporters .
464belgium2PLACE disraeli toured belgium and the rhine valley with his father in the summer of 1824 .
465birth2CONDITION sarah bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " .
466choice2EVENT the choice of a tory publication was regarded as strange by disraeli 's friends and relatives , who thought him more of a radical .
467dublin2PLACE an initial attempt by disraeli to negotiate with archbishop manning the establishment of a catholic university in dublin foundered in march when gladstone moved resolutions to disestablish the irish church altogether .
468electioneering2ACTIVITY moreover , at the time gallomania was published , disraeli was electioneering in high wycombe in the radical interest .
469crown2PERSON after peace was restored , and palmerston in early 1858 brought in legislation for direct rule of india by the crown , disraeli opposed it .
470aspects2INSTANCE gladstone in 1870 had sponsored an order in council , introducing competitive examination into the civil service , diminishing the political aspects of government hiring .
471month2PERIOD within a month of his appointment granby resigned the leadership in the commons and the party functioned without a leader in the commons for the rest of the session .
472followers2METAL stanley , in contrast , deprecated his inexperienced followers as a reason for not assuming office :
473towns2ENTITY it eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as liverpool and manchester .
474drugs act2ACT also enacted were the public health act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the sale of food and drugs act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education act 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict . c. 70 ) .
475correspondence2SIMILARITY he carried on a correspondence with victoria , with letters passed through intermediaries .
476lord mayor2HUMAN ROLE owing to his infirmities , disraeli was 45 minutes late for the lord mayor 's dinner at the guild hall in november , at which it is customary that the prime minister speaks .
477way2UNKNOWN a young man with dark hair and huge sideburns lord robert cecil , disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli led a toothless opposition in the commons—seeing no way of unseating palmerston , derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
478statements2STATEMENT less reticent were palmerston , gladstone , and russell , whose statements in support of the south contributed to years of hard feelings in the united states .
479september2PERIOD the negotiations were complicated by bentinck 's sudden death on 21 september 1848 , but disraeli obtained a loan of £25,000 from bentinck 's brothers lord henry bentinck and lord titchfield .
480lincoln2PERSON he enrolled as a student at lincoln 's inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , nathaniel basevy , and then those of benjamin austen , who persuaded isaac that disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
481chateaubriand2PERSON ill 's judgement that he was ' like all literary men , from chateaubriand to guizot , ignorant of the world'....
482bosnia2PLACE in july 1875 serb populations in bosnia and herzegovina , then provinces of the ottoman empire , revolted against the turks , alleging religious persecution and poor administration .
483return2STATEMENT on their return to england he left the solicitors , at the suggestion of maples , with the aim of qualifying as a barrister .
484spain2PLACE spain was losing its south american colonies in the face of rebellions .
485king2PERSON king 's road , bedford row , bloomsbury , london , the second child and eldest son of isaac d' israeli , a literary critic and historian , and maria ( miriam ) , née basevi .
486falconet2PERSON disraeli left an unfinished novel in which the priggish central character , falconet , is unmistakably a caricature of gladstone .
487loyalty2STATE in this , he came into disagreement with the queen , who out of loyalty to her late husband albert preferred broad church teachings .
488norms2STATE the critic william kuhn suggests that disraeli 's fiction can be read as " the memoirs he never wrote " , revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard to what kuhn sees as the author 's " ambiguous sexuality " .
489conversion2SPEECH ACT conversion enabled disraeli to contemplate a career in politics .
490ralph2PERSON isaac , maria and sarah disraeli 's siblings were sarah , naphtali ( born and died 1807 ) , ralph and james ( " jem " ) .
491appointment2DECISION within a month of his appointment granby resigned the leadership in the commons and the party functioned without a leader in the commons for the rest of the session .
492ambition2EVENT it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
493gout2CONDITION derby had long had attacks of gout which left him bedbound , unable to deal with politics .
494term main articles2ARTICLE first term main articles :
495circles2UNKNOWN it sold well , but caused much offence in influential circles when the authorship was discovered .
496colombia2PLACE at the urging of george canning the british government recognised the new independent governments of argentina ( 1824 ) , colombia and mexico ( both 1825 ) .
497campaign2PERSON with gladstone conducting a massive speaking campaign , the liberals defeated disraeli 's conservatives at the 1880 general election .
498whig2LIQUID whig pamphlet edited by john wilson croker and published by murray entitled england and france : or a cure for ministerial gallomania .
499monarchy2PLACE he helped preserve constitutional monarchy by drawing the queen out of mourning into a new symbolic national role and created the climate for what became ' tory democracy ' .
500caricatures2UNKNOWN disraeli continued to the last to pillory his enemies in barely disguised caricatures : the character st barbe in endymion is widely seen as a parody of thackeray , who had offended disraeli more than thirty years earlier by lampooning him in punch as " codlingsby " .
501lifetime2PERSON disraeli 's literary and political career interacted over his lifetime and fascinated victorian britain , making him " one of the most eminent figures in victorian public life " , and occasioned a large output of commentary .
502name2NAME disraeli 's sister and brothers adopted the new version of the name ;
503establishment2EVENT from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
504garter2WORD refer to caption disraeli ( right ) and salisbury as knights of the garter , portrayed by john tenniel in the pas de deux ( from the scène de triomphe in the grand anglo-turkish ballet d'action )
505rival2PERSON disraeli spoke in favour of the measure , arguing that christianity was " completed judaism " , and asking the house of commons " where is your christianity if you do not believe in their judaism ? " russell and disraeli 's future rival gladstone thought this brave ; the speech was badly received by his own party .
506wales2PLACE public support for disraeli was shown by cheering at a thanksgiving service in 1872 on the recovery of the prince of wales from illness , while gladstone was met with silence .
507expense2ACT disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
508accusation2AMOUNT murray and lockhart , men of great influence in literary circles , believed that disraeli had caricatured them and abused their confidence—an accusation denied by the author but repeated by many of his biographers .
509harvests2UNKNOWN he angered farmers by refusing to reinstitute the corn laws in response to poor harvests and cheap imported grain .
510escutcheon2UNKNOWN escutcheon
511top2PERSON two men and two women friends and allies of disraeli in the 1830s : clockwise from top left —
512reasons2EVENT his reasons are unknown , but the biographer bernard glassman surmises that it was to avoid being confused with his father .
513second2PERSON disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
514monarch2PERSON in office 20 february 1874 - 21 april 1880 monarch victoria preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone
515hours2PERIOD his speech of three hours was quickly seen as a parliamentary masterpiece .
516sarah disraeli2PERSON isaac , maria and sarah disraeli 's siblings were sarah , naphtali ( born and died 1807 ) , ralph and james ( " jem " ) .
517emancipation2ACT by 1882 , 46,000 jews lived in england , and by 1890 , jewish emancipation was complete .
518passage2EVENT disraeli gained wide acclaim and became a hero to his party for the " marvellous parliamentary skill " with which he secured the passage of reform in the commons .
519clockwise2PERSON two men and two women friends and allies of disraeli in the 1830s : clockwise from top left —
520resolutions2EVENT an initial attempt by disraeli to negotiate with archbishop manning the establishment of a catholic university in dublin foundered in march when gladstone moved resolutions to disestablish the irish church altogether .
521elements2ELEMENT it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
522franchise2PERMISSION the tories pursued a reform bill in 1859 , which would have resulted in a modest increase to the franchise .
523hair2HAIR a young man of vaguely semitic appearance , with long and curly black hair portrait of benjamin disraeli by francis grant .
524pantheon2PERSON paul smith , in his journal article on disraeli 's politics , argues that disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the british political pantheon . "
525attacks2EVENT derby had long had attacks of gout which left him bedbound , unable to deal with politics .
526responsibility2RESPONSIBILITY in late february , with parliament in session and derby absent , he wrote to disraeli asking for confirmation that " you will not shrink from the additional heavy responsibility " .
527lord stanley2PERSON an alliance of free-trade conservatives ( the " peelites " ) , radicals , and whigs carried repeal , and the conservative party split : the peelites moved towards the whigs , while a " new " conservative party formed around the protectionists , led by disraeli , bentinck , and lord stanley ( later lord derby ) .
528men clockwise2PERSON four men clockwise from top left :
529sale2RESULT also enacted were the public health act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the sale of food and drugs act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education act 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict . c. 70 ) .
530cost2EVENT the corn laws imposed a tariff on imported wheat , protecting british farmers from foreign competition , but making the cost of bread artificially high .
531supporter2PERSON he was a loyal supporter of the party leader sir robert peel and his policies , with the exception of a personal sympathy for the chartist movement that most tories did not share .
532second anglo afghan war2EVENT
533respect2EVENT isaac 's father , benjamin , was a prominent and devout member ; it was probably out of respect for him that isaac did not leave when he fell out with the synagogue authorities in 1813 .
534faith2PERSON however , until the jews relief act 1858 , mps were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
535italy2PLACE the family was mostly from italy , of sephardic jewish mercantile background .
536plevna2UNKNOWN congress of berlin main article : congress of berlin the russians pushed through ottoman territory and by december 1877 had captured the strategic bulgarian town of plevna .
537george ward hunt2PERSON the earl of derby preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by george ward hunt
538denmark2PLACE the party truce ended in 1864 , with tories outraged over palmerston 's handling of the territorial dispute between the german confederation and denmark known as the schleswig-holstein question .
539success2ACT the war divided the british , but the russian success caused some to forget the atrocities and call for intervention on the turkish side .
540maria2PLACE isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
541hughenden manor2PERSON while these intrigues played out , disraeli was working with the bentinck family to secure the necessary financing to purchase hughenden manor , in buckinghamshire .
542derby government2GOVERNMENT chancellor of the exchequer first derby government main article : who ?
543uprising2ACT the following january , sultan abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by hungarian statesman julius andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in serbia and bulgaria .
544tools2TOOL the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
545study2STUDY according to one study , " better sanitation was enforced throughout scotland . "
546bright2PERSON although disraeli forged a personal friendship with john bright , a leading radical , disraeli was unable to persuade bright to sacrifice his distinct position for parliamentary advancement .
547authority2STATUS according to aldous , the bill " shattered disraeli 's authority in the house of commons " .
548commoners2PERSON at that time , british politics were dominated by the aristocracy , with a few powerful commoners .
549army2HUMAN GROUP in advance of the conference , disraeli sent salisbury private word to seek british military occupation of bulgaria and bosnia , and british control of the ottoman army .
550actor2PERSON as an actor on the political stage he played many roles :
551enemy2PERSON in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
552themes2AGREEMENT in the 1840s disraeli wrote a trilogy of novels with political themes .
553cairns2PERSON first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
554aspect2INSTANCE this aspect of his policies has been re-evaluated by historians in the 20th and 21st centuries .
555solicitor2PERSON isaac 's friend sharon turner , a solicitor , convinced him that although he could comfortably remain unattached to any formal religion it would be disadvantageous to the children if they did so .
556funds2QUANTITY to make his budget revenue-neutral , as funds were needed to provide defences against the french , he doubled the house tax and continued the income tax .
557grain2QUANTITY in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
558chance2PERSON " dizzy married me for my money " , his wife said later , " but , if he had the chance again , he would marry me for love . "
559archbishop2PERSON an initial attempt by disraeli to negotiate with archbishop manning the establishment of a catholic university in dublin foundered in march when gladstone moved resolutions to disestablish the irish church altogether .
560whig leader2PERSON the tories remained split , and the queen sent for lord john russell , the whig leader .
561committee2HUMAN GROUP the british military efforts were marked by bungling , and in 1855 a restive parliament considered a resolution to establish a committee on the conduct of the war .
562subsidiarity2RULE subsidiarity *
563ministerial gallomania2UNKNOWN whig pamphlet edited by john wilson croker and published by murray entitled england and france : or a cure for ministerial gallomania .
564middlesex2PLACE the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
565regard2EVENT the critic william kuhn suggests that disraeli 's fiction can be read as " the memoirs he never wrote " , revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard to what kuhn sees as the author 's " ambiguous sexuality " .
566balance2GARMENT blake suggested that , on balance , these appointments cost disraeli more votes than they gained him .
567history2UNIT historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
568radicals2PERSON a small number of radicals , generally from northern constituencies , were the strongest advocates of continuing reform .
569advice2DECISION on gorst 's advice , disraeli gave a speech to a mass meeting in manchester that year .
570wheat2LIGHT the corn laws imposed a tariff on imported wheat , protecting british farmers from foreign competition , but making the cost of bread artificially high .
571bubble2PERIOD the paper survived only six months , partly because the mining bubble burst in late 1825 , and partly because , according to blake , the paper was " atrociously edited " .
572figures2FIGURE disraeli 's literary and political career interacted over his lifetime and fascinated victorian britain , making him " one of the most eminent figures in victorian public life " , and occasioned a large output of commentary .
573bloomsbury2PLACE the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
574period2PERIOD his other novel of this period is venetia , a romance based on the characters of shelley and byron , written quickly to raise much-needed money .
575spite2EVENT in spite of this , disraeli 's policy favoured constantinople and ottoman territorial integrity .
576account2COLLECTION by one account , the british ambassador in berlin , lord odo russell , hoping to spare the delegates disraeli 's very poor french accent , told disraeli that the congress was hoping to hear a speech in english by one of its masters .
577belief2TRUST tory democrat : the 1867 reform act it was disraeli 's belief that if given the vote british people would use it instinctively to put their natural and traditional rulers , the gentlemen of the conservative party , into power .
578air2AIR he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
579attitude2ATTITUDE they conditioned his attitude toward some of the most important political problems which faced him in his later years— especially the eastern question ; they also coloured many of his novels . "
580commission2INSTANCE derby had either to take office or risk damage to his reputation , and he accepted the queen 's commission as prime minister .
581lady londonderry2PERSON croker , lyndhurst , henrietta sykes and lady londonderry
582experiences2EFFECT despite this tragedy , and the need for treatment for a sexually transmitted disease on his return , disraeli felt enriched by his experiences .
583heroes2UNKNOWN disraeli and salisbury returned home to heroes ' receptions .
584vault2PERSON protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
585parents2PERSON spouse mary anne evans ​ ​ ( m. 1839 ; died 1872 ) ​ parents *
586customs2EVENT the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
587centre2UNKNOWN disraeli wrote the next day , " the terrible disaster has shaken me to the centre " .
588status2STATUS historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
589roles2ROLE lothair was " disraeli 's ideological pilgrim 's progress " , it tells a story of political life with particular regard to the roles of the anglican and roman catholic churches .
590poetry2ABILITY he brought politics nearer to poetry , or , at all events , to poetical prose , than any english politician since burke .
591representative2EVENT the new paper , the representative , promoted the mines and those politicians who supported them , particularly canning .
592companion2PERSON disraeli 's biographer , adam kirsch , suggests that disraeli 's obsequious treatment of his queen was part flattery , part belief that this was how a queen should be addressed by a loyal subject , and part awe that a middle-class man of jewish birth should be the companion of a monarch .
593batum2UNKNOWN the russians were willing to make changes to the big bulgaria , but were determined to retain their new possessions , bessarabia in europe and batum and kars on the east coast of the black sea .
594grounds2AMOUNT reviewers were sharply critical on these grounds of both the author and the book .
595matter2PERSON he declined , stating that he regarded the matter as settled .
596warnings2PERSON the fall of plevna was a major story for weeks , and disraeli 's warnings that russia was a threat to british interests in the eastern mediterranean were deemed prophetic .
597territory2PLACE congress of berlin main article : congress of berlin the russians pushed through ottoman territory and by december 1877 had captured the strategic bulgarian town of plevna .
598sympathy2EVENT he was a loyal supporter of the party leader sir robert peel and his policies , with the exception of a personal sympathy for the chartist movement that most tories did not share .
599possession2STATE the possession of a country house and incumbency of a county constituency were regarded as essential for a tory with leadership ambitions .
600stage2STAGE as an actor on the political stage he played many roles :
601liberalism2BODY muscular liberalism * noblesse oblige * paternalism * pragmatism *
602marquess2PERSON in office 21 april 1880 - 19 april 1881 monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone preceded by marquess of hartington succeeded by the marquess of salisbury
603russo turkish war2EVENT
604ultimatum2EVENT the viceroy of india lord lytton concealed his plans to issue this ultimatum from disraeli , and when the prime minister insisted he take no action , went ahead anyway .
605reputation2REPUTATION disraeli made many changes , softening his satire , but the damage to his reputation proved long-lasting .
606writing2UNKNOWN isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
607icon politics2ACTION one nation conservatives caucus * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * flag united kingdom portal * v * t * e portrait of benjamin disraeli by john everett millais , 1881
608advantage2CONDITION when disraeli returned as prime minister in 1874 and went to kiss hands , he did so literally , on one knee ; according to richard aldous in his book on the rivalry between disraeli and gladstone , " victoria and disraeli would exploit their closeness for mutual advantage . "
609version2PERMISSION disraeli 's sister and brothers adopted the new version of the name ;
610education2PROCESS he began there in the autumn term of 1817 ; he later recalled his education :
611lady bradford2PERSON disraeli made various statements about his elevation , writing to selina , lady bradford on 8 august 1876 , " i am quite tired of that place " but when asked by a friend how he liked the lords , replied , " i am dead ; dead but in the elysian fields . "
612taunton2PERSON two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
613wyndham lewis2PERSON the other was wyndham lewis , who helped finance disraeli 's election campaign , and who died the following year .
614allegiance2STATE however , until the jews relief act 1858 , mps were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
615eagle2PERSON per saltire gules and argent a castle triple-towered in chief argent two lions rampant in fess sable and an eagle displayed in base or .
616masterpiece2UNKNOWN his speech of three hours was quickly seen as a parliamentary masterpiece .
617elite2PERSON historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
618john murray2PERSON he had made a tentative start : in may 1824 he submitted a manuscript to his father 's friend , the publisher john murray , but withdrew it before murray could decide whether to publish it .
619world2PLACE disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
620tory democracy2PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
621films2EVENT film historian roy armes has argued that historical films helped maintain the political status quo in britain in the 1920s and 1930s by imposing an establishment viewpoint that emphasized the greatness of monarchy , empire , and tradition .
622demands2EVENT finding the financial demands of his maidstone seat too much , disraeli secured a tory nomination for shrewsbury , winning one of the constituency 's two seats at the 1841 general election , despite serious opposition , and heavy debts which opponents seized on .
623damage2EVENT disraeli made many changes , softening his satire , but the damage to his reputation proved long-lasting .
624suit2TENDENCY the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
625cairo2PLACE the tour was cut short suddenly by meredith 's death from smallpox in cairo in july 1831 .
626constantinople conference2ACT four men international delegates at the constantinople conference : clockwise from top left , saffet pasha ( turkey ) , general ignatieff ( russia ) , lord salisbury ( britain ) and the comte de chaudordy ( france )
627threat2PERSON with much of the pre-canal trade and communications between britain and india passing through the ottoman empire , britain had done its best to prop up the ottomans against the threat that russia would take constantinople , cutting those communications , and giving russian ships unfettered access to the mediterranean .
628nomination2DEVICE finding the financial demands of his maidstone seat too much , disraeli secured a tory nomination for shrewsbury , winning one of the constituency 's two seats at the 1841 general election , despite serious opposition , and heavy debts which opponents seized on .
629betrayal2ACT there were tory dissenters , most notably lord cranborne ( as robert cecil was by then known ) who resigned from the government and spoke against the bill , accusing disraeli of " a political betrayal which has no parallel in our parliamentary annals " .
630tradition2STYLE blake argued that disraeli 's imperialism " decisively orientated the conservative party for many years to come , and the tradition which he started was probably a bigger electoral asset in winning working-class support during the last quarter of the century than anything else " .
631class collaboration2PERSON class collaboration * conservatism *
632film2ARTWORK film historian roy armes has argued that historical films helped maintain the political status quo in britain in the 1920s and 1930s by imposing an establishment viewpoint that emphasized the greatness of monarchy , empire , and tradition .
633croker2PERSON croker , lyndhurst , henrietta sykes and lady londonderry
634deal2SITUATION derby had long had attacks of gout which left him bedbound , unable to deal with politics .
635christianity2PERSON disraeli spoke in favour of the measure , arguing that christianity was " completed judaism " , and asking the house of commons " where is your christianity if you do not believe in their judaism ? " russell and disraeli 's future rival gladstone thought this brave ; the speech was badly received by his own party .
636federation2HUMAN GROUP british policy in south africa was to encourage federation between the british-run cape colony and natal , and the boer republics , the transvaal ( annexed by britain in 1877 ) and the orange free state .
637force2FORCE disraeli attacked his opponents individually , and then as a force :
638noblesse oblige2UNKNOWN muscular liberalism * noblesse oblige * paternalism * pragmatism *
639late2PERIOD the paper survived only six months , partly because the mining bubble burst in late 1825 , and partly because , according to blake , the paper was " atrociously edited " .
640philosophy2STATE it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
641revenge2FORM he turned to writing , motivated partly by his desperate need for money , and partly by a wish for revenge on murray and others by whom he felt slighted .
642aberdeen2PERSON he was replaced by the peelite earl of aberdeen , with gladstone as his chancellor .
643maynooth grant2PERSON however , the best known of these stances were over the maynooth grant in 1845 and the repeal of the corn laws in 1846 .
644tariff2PERSON in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
645feelings2ACTIVITY in response , gladstone denied that personal feelings played any role in his decisions then and previously whether to accept office , while acknowledging that there were differences between him and derby " broader than you may have supposed " .
646australia1PLACE australia * austria *
647london banker henry oppenheim1PERSON on 14 november 1875 , the editor of the pall mall gazette , frederick greenwood , learned from london banker henry oppenheim that the khedive was seeking to sell his shares in the suez canal company to a french firm .
648programme1UNKNOWN in 2007 parry wrote , " the tory democrat myth did not survive detailed scrutiny by professional historical writing of the 1960s demonstrated that disraeli had very little interest in a programme of social legislation and was very flexible in handling parliamentary reform in 1867 . " despite this , parry sees disraeli , rather than peel , as the founder of the modern conservative party .
649loans1AGREEMENT under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
650autobiography1PERSON it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
651satisfactory1PERSON although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
652stock exchange1RESULT released from the law , disraeli did some work for murray , but turned most of his attention to speculative dealing on the stock exchange .
653april monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone1PERSON
654ultra principles1PERSON ultra principles * ancestral worship *
655berlin main article1ARTICLE congress of berlin main article : congress of berlin the russians pushed through ottoman territory and by december 1877 had captured the strategic bulgarian town of plevna .
656who1UNKNOWN lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
657east india company1INSTITUTION when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
658thing1ENTITY a proud thing for a man 'risen from the people ' to have obtained ! "
659one nation1PERSON one nation conservatives caucus * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * flag united kingdom portal * v * t * e portrait of benjamin disraeli by john everett millais , 1881
660measures1MEASURE in the interim , disraeli , as conservative leader in the commons , opposed the government on all major measures .
661memorials disraeli1PERSON final months , death , and memorials disraeli refused to cast blame for the defeat , which he understood was likely to be final for him .
662midlothian1UNKNOWN in december 1878 , gladstone was offered the liberal nomination for edinburghshire , a constituency popularly known as midlothian .
663westminster abbey1PERSON disraeli has a memorial in westminster abbey , erected by the nation on the motion of gladstone in his memorial speech on disraeli in the house of commons .
664streak1PERSON disraeli 's politics at the time were influenced both by his rebellious streak and his desire to make his mark .
665description bulgaria1PLACE
666summers1PERSON four consecutive wet summers through 1879 had led to poor harvests .
667culprits1PERSON disraeli called them " coffee-house babble " and dismissed allegations of torture by the ottomans since " oriental people usually terminate their connections with culprits in a more expeditious fashion " .
668reverse1PORTION i have often thought , though i have often regretted the university , that it was much the reverse .
669conviction1ACT during his lifetime , disraeli 's opponents , and sometimes even his friends and allies , questioned whether he sincerely held the views he propounded , or whether they were adopted by him as politically essential and lacked conviction .
670combat1CONDITION as zulu troops could not marry until they had washed their spears in blood , they were eager for combat .
671ottoman army1HUMAN GROUP in advance of the conference , disraeli sent salisbury private word to seek british military occupation of bulgaria and bosnia , and british control of the ottoman army .
672wellington1PLACE few of the new cabinet had held office before ; when derby tried to inform the duke of wellington of the names of the ministers , the old duke , who was somewhat deaf , inadvertently branded the new government by incredulously repeating " who ?
673eliezer cogan1PERSON the school chosen for him was run by eliezer cogan at higham hill in walthamstow .
674smallpox1PERSON the tour was cut short suddenly by meredith 's death from smallpox in cairo in july 1831 .
675appearance opponents1PERSON two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
676monarchism1CONCEPT monarchism + royalism * moral absolutism * natalism *
677peterson politicians1PERSON hoppe * dugin * peterson politicians *
678rulers1PLACE tory democrat : the 1867 reform act it was disraeli 's belief that if given the vote british people would use it instinctively to put their natural and traditional rulers , the gentlemen of the conservative party , into power .
679clouds1SUBSTANCE only four and a half years had passed and they did not see any clouds on the horizon that might forecast conservative defeat if they waited .
680cut weeks1PERIOD the suez canal , opened in 1869 , cut weeks and thousands of miles off the sea journey between britain and india ; in 1875 , approximately 80 % of the ships using the canal were british .
681hunt—in1UNKNOWN in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
682access1OCCURRENCE with much of the pre-canal trade and communications between britain and india passing through the ottoman empire , britain had done its best to prop up the ottomans against the threat that russia would take constantinople , cutting those communications , and giving russian ships unfettered access to the mediterranean .
683paths1PLACE although their paths diverged over the repeal of the corn laws in 1846 and later over fiscal policy more generally , it was not until the later 1860s that their differences over parliamentary reform , irish and church policy assumed great partisan significance .
684schleswig holstein question1QUESTION
685cranborne1UNKNOWN there were tory dissenters , most notably lord cranborne ( as robert cecil was by then known ) who resigned from the government and spoke against the bill , accusing disraeli of " a political betrayal which has no parallel in our parliamentary annals " .
686abanazar1UNKNOWN suez portrait of disraeli published in 1873 refer to caption new crowns for old depicts disraeli as abanazar from the pantomime aladdin , offering victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one .
687head1HEAD palmerston was deemed essential to any whig ministry , and he would not join any he did not head .
688austria1PLACE australia * austria *
689prussian crown princess victoria1PERSON the monarch wrote to her daughter , prussian crown princess victoria , " mr . disraeli is prime minister !
690das1UNKNOWN in berlin , word spread of bismarck 's admiring description of disraeli , " der alte jude , das ist der mann !
691culture disraeli1PERSON popular culture disraeli , the first person caricatured in the london magazine vanity fair , 30 january 1869 .
692strauss1PERSON mannheim * jünger * evola * strauss * röpke * gadamer * freyre *
693propagation1MONEY disraeli 's enthusiastic propagation of the british empire has also been seen as appealing to working-class voters .
694hitherto1UNKNOWN disraeli caused an uproar in the congress by making his opening address in english , rather than in french , hitherto accepted as the international language of diplomacy .
695presbyterians1UNKNOWN it remained the established church and was funded by direct taxation , which was greatly resented by the catholics and presbyterians .
696lord lyndhurst1PERSON in 1834 he was introduced to the former lord chancellor , lord lyndhurst , by henrietta sykes , wife of sir francis sykes .
697lord cranborne1PERSON there were tory dissenters , most notably lord cranborne ( as robert cecil was by then known ) who resigned from the government and spoke against the bill , accusing disraeli of " a political betrayal which has no parallel in our parliamentary annals " .
698anniversary1TIME PERIOD the anniversary of disraeli 's death was for some years commemorated in the united kingdom as primrose day .
699greece1PLACE france * germany * greece * guatemala *
700wreath1BODY protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
701savarkar1UNKNOWN ilyin * savarkar *
702side capable1PLACE in blake 's words , " found himself almost the only figure on his side capable of putting up the oratorical display essential for a parliamentary leader . "
703ulundi1UNKNOWN disraeli sent general sir garnet wolseley as high commissioner and commander in chief , and cetewayo and the zulus were crushed at the battle of ulundi on 4 july 1879 .
704absent1UNKNOWN in late february , with parliament in session and derby absent , he wrote to disraeli asking for confirmation that " you will not shrink from the additional heavy responsibility " .
705german chancellor bismarck1PERSON this was unacceptable to the british , who protested , hoping to get the russians to agree to attend an international conference which german chancellor bismarck proposed to hold at berlin .
706office april1PERIOD
707sir george cornewall lewis1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir george cornewall lewis succeeded by william ewart gladstone
708december—it1UNKNOWN a middle-aged man in victorian clothes gladstone in the 1850s disraeli delivered the budget on 3 december 1852 , and prepared to wind up the debate for the government on 16 december—it was customary for the chancellor to have the last word .
709advancement1AMOUNT although disraeli forged a personal friendship with john bright , a leading radical , disraeli was unable to persuade bright to sacrifice his distinct position for parliamentary advancement .
710caption new crowns1UNKNOWN suez portrait of disraeli published in 1873 refer to caption new crowns for old depicts disraeli as abanazar from the pantomime aladdin , offering victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one .
711lawyer1PERSON " i determined when descending those magical waters that i would not be a lawyer . "
712recipient1PERSON one card , signed " a workman " , delighted its recipient :
713torture1PERSON disraeli called them " coffee-house babble " and dismissed allegations of torture by the ottomans since " oriental people usually terminate their connections with culprits in a more expeditious fashion " .
714khomeinism1CONCEPT qutbism + khomeinism * reaganism *
715had gladstone1PERSON nevertheless , disraeli made fewer peers ( only 22 , including one of victoria 's sons ) than had gladstone ( 37 during his just over five years in office ) .
716use1USE i do not use it as a term of reproach ; there are many most respectable jews .
717mannheim1PLACE mannheim * jünger * evola * strauss * röpke * gadamer * freyre *
718writer john gibson lockhart1PERSON disraeli impressed murray with his energy and commitment to the project , but he failed in his key task of persuading the eminent writer john gibson lockhart to edit the paper .
719british voters1PERSON he made the conservatives the party most identified with the british empire and military action to expand it , both of which were popular among british voters .
720impressions1GARMENT blake regards the tour as one of the formative experiences of disraeli 's career : " he impressions that it made on him were life-lasting .
721instructions1ACT salisbury ignored these instructions , which his biographer , andrew roberts deemed " ludicrous " .
722mixing1ACT the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
723sarah1PERSON sarah bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " .
724st mawgan1PLACE the disraeli vault also contains the body of sarah brydges willyams , the wife of james brydges willyams of st mawgan .
725dardanelles1UNKNOWN disraeli gained agreement that turkey should retain enough of its european possessions to safeguard the dardanelles .
726laws1PERSON in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
727acceptance1PURPOSE the films created " a facsimile world where existing values were invariably validated by events in the film and where all discord could be turned into harmony by an acceptance of the status quo " .
728portuguese1UNKNOWN he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
729southwark1PLACE despite this pessimism , conservatives hopes were buoyed in early 1880 with successes in by-elections the liberals had expected to win , concluding with victory in southwark , normally a liberal stronghold .
730norway1PLACE mexico * netherlands * new zealand * norway * pakistan * panama * peru * poland *
731comment1EVENT although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
732freyre1PERSON mannheim * jünger * evola * strauss * röpke * gadamer * freyre *
733fifty1PERSON as a result of these social reforms the liberal-labour mp alexander macdonald told his constituents in 1879 , " the conservative party have done more for the working classes in five years than the liberals have in fifty . "
734men international1PERSON four men international delegates at the constantinople conference : clockwise from top left , saffet pasha ( turkey ) , general ignatieff ( russia ) , lord salisbury ( britain ) and the comte de chaudordy ( france )
735dwellings improvement act1ACT under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
736parliament square1PLACE a statue on a podium statue of disraeli in parliament square , london disraeli is buried with his wife in a vault beneath the church of st michael and all angels which stands in the grounds of his home , hughenden manor .
737bedbound1UNKNOWN derby had long had attacks of gout which left him bedbound , unable to deal with politics .
738turpitude1QUALITY but there are , as in every other people , some of the lowest and most disgusting grade of moral turpitude ; and of those i look upon mr . disraeli as the worst .
739outreach1PERSON he played a central role in the creation of the modern conservative party , defining its policies and its broad outreach .
740faults1QUANTITY in spite of these faults .
741press reports1SYMBOL daniel o'connell , misled by inaccurate press reports , thought disraeli had slandered him while electioneering at taunton ; he launched an outspoken attack , referring to disraeli as : a reptile ...
742self consciousness1STATE
743tory circles1PERSON he began to move in tory circles .
744ejection1EVENT opposition and third term as chancellor main article : third derby-disraeli ministry after derby 's second ejection from office , disraeli faced dissension within conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister warned disraeli of some mps seeking his removal from the front bench .
745rivalry1PERSON when disraeli returned as prime minister in 1874 and went to kiss hands , he did so literally , on one knee ; according to richard aldous in his book on the rivalry between disraeli and gladstone , " victoria and disraeli would exploit their closeness for mutual advantage . "
746steven fielding1PERSON steven fielding has argued that disraeli was an especially popular film hero : " historical dramas favoured disraeli over gladstone and , more substantively , promulgated an essentially deferential view of democratic leadership . "
747bukelism1CONCEPT berlusconism * bukelism * cameronism *
748hartlebury1UNKNOWN the rise of iskander ( 1833 ) * the infernal marriage ( unfinished ; 1834 ) * a year at hartlebury , or the election - with sarah disraeli ( 1834 ) * henrietta temple ( 1837 ) * venetia ( 1837 ) * lothair ( 1870 ) * endymion ( 1880 ) *
749signing1EVENT once the bill was formally enacted , victoria began signing her letters " victoria r & i " ( latin : regina et imperatrix , queen and empress ) .
750carlyle1PERSON savigny * carlyle * ranke * newman *
751sampson gideon1PERSON there had been members of parliament ( mps ) from jewish families since sampson gideon in 1770 .
752gentlemen i1PERSON
753corruption1UNKNOWN his targets included the whigs , collectively and individually , irish nationalists , and political corruption .
754audience1EVENT though many commented on how healthy he looked , it took him great effort to appear so , and when he told the audience he expected to speak to the dinner again the following year , attendees chuckled .
755adam kirsch1PERSON disraeli 's biographer , adam kirsch , suggests that disraeli 's obsequious treatment of his queen was part flattery , part belief that this was how a queen should be addressed by a loyal subject , and part awe that a middle-class man of jewish birth should be the companion of a monarch .
756religious zionism1CONCEPT jewish conservatism + religious zionism *
757masse1UNKNOWN reassured , he wrote to the queen , resigning and recommending disraeli as " only he could command the cordial support , en masse , of his present colleagues " .
758countrymen1PERSON he became , in parry 's words , " aware of values that seemed denied to his insular countrymen .
759zia1PERSON suharto * lee * zia * vajpayee *
760office december1PERIOD
761talents1EVENT at the start of the next session , affairs were handled by a triumvirate of granby , disraeli , and john charles herries— indicative of the tension between disraeli and the rest of the party , who needed his talents but mistrusted him .
762property act1ACT disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
763solutions1ACT presenting jewishness as aristocratic and religious legitimized his claim to understand the perils facing modern england and to offer ' national ' solutions to them .
764seas1QUANTITY the public saw the venture as a daring statement of british dominance of the seas .
765lord beaconsfield1PERSON in later years , the german chancellor would show visitors to his office three pictures on the wall : " the portrait of my sovereign , there on the right that of my wife , and on the left , there , that of lord beaconsfield " .
766effects1EFFECT conservative chances of re-election were damaged by the poor weather , and consequent effects on agriculture .
767argentina1PLACE at the urging of george canning the british government recognised the new independent governments of argentina ( 1824 ) , colombia and mexico ( both 1825 ) .
768benjamin disraeli crest issuant1PERSON arms caption : coat of arms of benjamin disraeli crest issuant from a wreath of oak proper a castle triple-towered argent .
769salary1AMOUNT disraeli may have been attracted to the office by the £5,000 annual salary , which would help pay his debts .
770pioneer1UNKNOWN he began as a pioneer in dress and an aesthete of words ...
771tax1PLACE to make his budget revenue-neutral , as funds were needed to provide defences against the french , he doubled the house tax and continued the income tax .
772december prime minister1HUMAN ROLE
773cancer1ABSTRACT ENTITY through 1872 the eighty-year-old peeress had stomach cancer .
774concert1AGREEMENT he articulated an imperial role for britain that would last into world war ii and brought an intermittently self-isolated britain into the concert of europe .
775synagogue authorities1STATUS isaac 's father , benjamin , was a prominent and devout member ; it was probably out of respect for him that isaac did not leave when he fell out with the synagogue authorities in 1813 .
776hunt1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by george ward hunt
777contract1PERSON the contract for purchase was signed at cairo on 25 november and the shares deposited at the british consulate the following day .
778speed1STATE before they could arrive , on 22 january , a zulu impi ( army ) , moving with great speed and endurance , destroyed a british encampment in south africa in the battle of isandlwana .
779john gielgud1PERSON john gielgud portrayed disraeli in 1941 , in thorold dickinson 's morale-boosting film the prime minister , which followed the politician from the age of 30 to that of 70 .
780horizon1PLACE only four and a half years had passed and they did not see any clouds on the horizon that might forecast conservative defeat if they waited .
781range1PARTICLE to roaring approval , he compared the liberal front bench to " a range of exhausted volcanoes...
782primroses1PLANT protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
783tory parliamentary candidate1PERSON on the recommendation of the carlton club , disraeli was adopted as a tory parliamentary candidate at the ensuing general election .
784erdoğanism1CONCEPT chiangism * erdoğanism * francoism *
785candidate1PERSON two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
786arms caption1CONDITION arms caption : coat of arms of benjamin disraeli crest issuant from a wreath of oak proper a castle triple-towered argent .
787sir bartle1PERSON the governor of cape colony , sir bartle frere , believing that the federation could not be accomplished until the native tribes acknowledged british rule , made demands on the zulu and their king , cetewayo , which they were certain to reject .
788capacity1STATUS disraeli 's courage , quickness of wit , capacity for affection , and freedom from sordid motives earned him his position .
789consumption1CONDITION despite the gravity of disraeli 's condition , the doctors concocted optimistic bulletins for public consumption .
790general ignatieff1PERSON four men international delegates at the constantinople conference : clockwise from top left , saffet pasha ( turkey ) , general ignatieff ( russia ) , lord salisbury ( britain ) and the comte de chaudordy ( france )
791democrat myth1COLLECTION in 2007 parry wrote , " the tory democrat myth did not survive detailed scrutiny by professional historical writing of the 1960s demonstrated that disraeli had very little interest in a programme of social legislation and was very flexible in handling parliamentary reform in 1867 . " despite this , parry sees disraeli , rather than peel , as the founder of the modern conservative party .
792punch1PERSON disraeli continued to the last to pillory his enemies in barely disguised caricatures : the character st barbe in endymion is widely seen as a parody of thackeray , who had offended disraeli more than thirty years earlier by lampooning him in punch as " codlingsby " .
793stronghold1PLACE despite this pessimism , conservatives hopes were buoyed in early 1880 with successes in by-elections the liberals had expected to win , concluding with victory in southwark , normally a liberal stronghold .
794codlingsby1UNKNOWN disraeli continued to the last to pillory his enemies in barely disguised caricatures : the character st barbe in endymion is widely seen as a parody of thackeray , who had offended disraeli more than thirty years earlier by lampooning him in punch as " codlingsby " .
795hoppe1PERSON hoppe * dugin * peterson politicians *
796iorga1PERSON nordau * belloc * iorga * chesterton *
797priorities1PERSON one of russell 's early priorities was a reform bill , but the proposed legislation that gladstone announced on 12 march 1866 divided his party .
798mines1FORCE the new paper , the representative , promoted the mines and those politicians who supported them , particularly canning .
799loan1PERSON the negotiations were complicated by bentinck 's sudden death on 21 september 1848 , but disraeli obtained a loan of £25,000 from bentinck 's brothers lord henry bentinck and lord titchfield .
800miriam1PERSON king 's road , bedford row , bloomsbury , london , the second child and eldest son of isaac d' israeli , a literary critic and historian , and maria ( miriam ) , née basevi .
801theravada buddhism1PERSON theravada buddhism * traditionalist catholicism + integralism + ultramontanism * traditionalist school personal variants *
802concept1CONCEPT he rejected the concept in its entirety . "
803intervention1ACTION the war divided the british , but the russian success caused some to forget the atrocities and call for intervention on the turkish side .
804miles1COLLECTION the suez canal , opened in 1869 , cut weeks and thousands of miles off the sea journey between britain and india ; in 1875 , approximately 80 % of the ships using the canal were british .
805black sea1PLACE the russians were willing to make changes to the big bulgaria , but were determined to retain their new possessions , bessarabia in europe and batum and kars on the east coast of the black sea .
806catholic1PERSON although ireland was largely roman catholic , the church of england represented most landowners .
807climate1STUDY he helped preserve constitutional monarchy by drawing the queen out of mourning into a new symbolic national role and created the climate for what became ' tory democracy ' .
808chesterton1PERSON nordau * belloc * iorga * chesterton *
809peace treaty1ARTIFACT the prime minister wanted a deal with the ottomans whereby britain would temporarily occupy strategic areas to deter the russians from war , to be returned on the signing of a peace treaty , but found little support in his cabinet , which favoured partition of the ottoman empire .
810impact1ACTION of the other novels of the early 1830s , alroy is described by blake as " profitable but unreadable " , and the rise of iskander ( 1833 ) and the infernal marriage and ixion in heaven ( 1834 ) made little impact .
811december general election1POWER disraeli 's government survived until the december general election , at which the liberals were returned to power with a majority .
812visits1EVENT he had rarely travelled abroad ; since his youthful tour of the middle east in 1830-1831 , he had left britain only for his honeymoon and three visits to paris , the last of which was in 1856 .
813london magazine vanity fair1PERSON popular culture disraeli , the first person caricatured in the london magazine vanity fair , 30 january 1869 .
814meredith1PERSON 1830-1837 together with his sister 's fiancé , william meredith , disraeli travelled widely in southern europe and beyond in 1830-31 .
815centuries1PERIOD this aspect of his policies has been re-evaluated by historians in the 20th and 21st centuries .
816intellectuals1PERSON he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
817authoritarianism1PERSON right-wing politics + alt + authoritarianism + centre + dictatorship + far + new * small-c conservative * toryism * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * v * t * e novels * vivian grey ( 1826 , revised 1853 ) *
818losing1PROCESS upon derby 's retirement in 1868 , disraeli became prime minister briefly before losing that year 's general election .
819stevens1PERSON in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
820whigs bawl1INSTANCE in the mean time , the whigs bawl that there is a " collision ! "
821persecution1ACT in july 1875 serb populations in bosnia and herzegovina , then provinces of the ottoman empire , revolted against the turks , alleging religious persecution and poor administration .
822duel1PERSON disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
823francs1ARTIFACT on 23 november , the khedive offered to sell the shares for 100,000,000 francs .
824cinema audience1EVENT fielding says arliss " personified the kind of paternalistic , kindly , homely statesmanship that appealed to a significant proportion of the cinema audience ...
825todd endelman1PERSON todd endelman points out that " the link between jews and old clothes was so fixed in the popular imagination that victorian political cartoonists regularly drew benjamin disraeli as an old clothes man in order to stress his jewishness . "
826survival1FORM as in 1852 , derby led a minority government , dependent on the division of its opponents for survival .
827easter monday1PERIOD on the morning of the following day , easter monday , he became incoherent , then comatose .
828anti immigration1PERSON
829janismo1UNKNOWN fujimorism * gaullism * janismo * kaczyzm *
830life childhood disraeli1PERSON early life childhood disraeli was born on 21 december 1804 at 6
831fashion1TENDENCY disraeli called them " coffee-house babble " and dismissed allegations of torture by the ottomans since " oriental people usually terminate their connections with culprits in a more expeditious fashion " .
832state funeral1PLACE despite having been offered a state funeral by queen victoria , disraeli 's executors decided against a public procession and funeral , fearing that too large crowds would gather to do him honour .
833private1PERSON after this i was with a private tutor for two years in my own county , & my education was severely classical .
834merchants1PERSON disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
835bulgaria cavalry1PLACE balkans and bulgaria cavalry wielding sabres fight men with guns on foot fight in
836wit1PLACE disraeli 's courage , quickness of wit , capacity for affection , and freedom from sordid motives earned him his position .
837high commissioner1PERSON disraeli sent general sir garnet wolseley as high commissioner and commander in chief , and cetewayo and the zulus were crushed at the battle of ulundi on 4 july 1879 .
838journal article1ARTICLE paul smith , in his journal article on disraeli 's politics , argues that disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the british political pantheon . "
839anglo zulu war1EVENT
840project1ACTION disraeli impressed murray with his energy and commitment to the project , but he failed in his key task of persuading the eminent writer john gibson lockhart to edit the paper .
841aim1PERSON on their return to england he left the solicitors , at the suggestion of maples , with the aim of qualifying as a barrister .
842transit1DOCUMENT the cabinet discussed disraeli 's proposal to position indian troops at malta for possible transit to the balkans and call out reserves .
843taiwan1PLACE south korea * taiwan * turkey * ukraine * united kingdom * united states related ideologies * agrarianism *
844honeymoon1ACT he had rarely travelled abroad ; since his youthful tour of the middle east in 1830-1831 , he had left britain only for his honeymoon and three visits to paris , the last of which was in 1856 .
845manners1PERSON russell , rothschild , manners and granby
846good1UNKNOWN disraeli kept labouchere 's majority down to 170 , a good showing that put him in line for a winnable seat in the near future .
847fire1FIRE he reprimanded frere , but left him in charge , attracting fire from all sides .
848business partners1GROUP by june 1825 he and his business partners had lost £7,000 .
849couple1GROUP his motives were generally assumed to be mercenary , but the couple came to cherish one another , remaining close until she died more than three decades later .
850delicate health1PROPERTY bradford speculates that " benjamin 's delicate health and his obviously jewish appearance may have had something to do with it . "
851field1BALL disraeli , his closest ally , was his second choice and accepted , though disclaiming any great knowledge in the financial field .
852state model1PLACE family as a state model *
853contracts1PERSON disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
854sea1PLACE there are occasional earthquakes and ever and again the dark rumbling of the sea . "
855writers1PERSON historical writers have often played disraeli and gladstone against each other as great rivals .
856traditionalist school personal variants1ABILITY theravada buddhism * traditionalist catholicism + integralism + ultramontanism * traditionalist school personal variants *
857nathan mayer rothschild1PERSON in 1884 nathan mayer rothschild , 1st baron rothschild , became the first jewish member of the british house of lords ;
858jünger1PERSON mannheim * jünger * evola * strauss * röpke * gadamer * freyre *
859source1RANK disraeli kept himself informed on foreign affairs , and on what was going on in cabinet , thanks to a source within it .
860privy councillor1EVENT almost blind , when he received the last letter from victoria of which he was aware on 5 april , he held it momentarily , then had it read to him by lord barrington , a privy councillor .
861quarrel1DISPUTE following a quarrel in 1813 with the bevis marks synagogue , his father renounced judaism and had the four children baptised into the church of england in july and august 1817 .
862irish mp daniel o'connell1PERSON
863east1PLACE when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
864analysts1PERSON the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
865rivals1GROUP historical writers have often played disraeli and gladstone against each other as great rivals .
866intellect1FORM disraeli liked to think of himself in terms of pure intellect , but his politics were more personal than intellectual in character .
867ground1AMOUNT queen victoria was prostrated with grief , and considered ennobling ralph or coningsby as a memorial to disraeli ( without children , his titles became extinct with his death ) , but decided against it on the ground that their means were too small for a peerage .
868academy award1ACT stage and screen actor george arliss was known for his portrayals of disraeli , winning the academy award for best actor for 1929 's disraeli .
869winston1PERSON protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
870relativism1RULE the journey encouraged his self-consciousness , his moral relativism , and his interest in eastern racial and religious attitudes . "
871first disraeli ministry derby1PERSON
872mary lewis1PERSON twelve years disraeli 's senior , mary lewis had a substantial income of £5,000 a year .
873isaac d'israeli1PERSON isaac d'israeli had never taken religion very seriously but had remained a conforming member of the synagogue .
874prominence1DISTANCE he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
875viscounty1UNKNOWN in addition to the viscounty bestowed on mary anne disraeli , the earldom of beaconsfield was to have been bestowed on edmund burke in 1797 , but he had died before receiving it .
876victorian politics1PERSON he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
877wilberforce1PERSON civil service disraeli 's failure to appoint samuel wilberforce as bishop of london may have cost him votes in the 1868 election .
878nathaniel basevy1PERSON he enrolled as a student at lincoln 's inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , nathaniel basevy , and then those of benjamin austen , who persuaded isaac that disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
879september sir louis cavagnari1PERSON
880malt1BEVERAGE his proposed budget , which he presented to the commons on 3 december , lowered the taxes on malt and tea , provisions designed to appeal to the working class .
881effort1ACTION though many commented on how healthy he looked , it took him great effort to appear so , and when he told the audience he expected to speak to the dinner again the following year , attendees chuckled .
882procure1UNKNOWN act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
883primrose day1PERIOD the anniversary of disraeli 's death was for some years commemorated in the united kingdom as primrose day .
884thatcher1PERSON thatcher * kohl * fujimori * bush * trump *
885four part atv miniseries disraeli1PERSON
886biographer philip magnus1PERSON gladstone 's biographer philip magnus contrasted disraeli 's grasp of foreign affairs with that of gladstone , who " never understood that high moral principles , in their application to foreign policy , are more often destructive of political stability than motives of national self-interest . "
887whig members1PERSON the new house of commons had more conservative than whig members , but the depth of the tory schism enabled russell to continue to govern .
888​ parents1PERSON spouse mary anne evans ​ ​ ( m. 1839 ; died 1872 ) ​ parents *
889opening1EVENT disraeli caused an uproar in the congress by making his opening address in english , rather than in french , hitherto accepted as the international language of diplomacy .
890commons—seeing1UNKNOWN a young man with dark hair and huge sideburns lord robert cecil , disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli led a toothless opposition in the commons—seeing no way of unseating palmerston , derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
891hand1PERSON disraeli , on the other hand , was anxious to return to office .
892stanley weintraub1PERSON external videos video icon booknotes interview with stanley weintraub on disraeli : a biography , february 6 , 1994 , c-span stanley weintraub , in his biography of disraeli , points out that his subject did much to advance britain towards the 20th century , carrying one of the two great reform acts of the 19th despite the opposition of his liberal rival , gladstone .
893combination1ACT act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
894writer douglas hurd1PERSON the conservative politician and writer douglas hurd wrote in 2013 , " was not a one-nation conservative— and this was not simply because he never used the phrase .
895virtuoso1PERSON byronic hero , man of letters , social critic , parliamentary virtuoso , squire of hughenden , royal companion , european statesman .
896primacy1COLLECTION disraeli made the conservatives the party that most loudly supported both the empire and military action to assert its primacy .
897fork1HORSE there was a vogue for what was called " silver fork fiction " — novels depicting aristocratic life , usually by anonymous authors , read by the aspirational middle classes .
898ill1PERSON disraeli had little help from derby , who was ill , but he united the party enough on a no-confidence vote to limit the government to a majority of 18— tory defections and absentees kept palmerston in office .
899carteret webb1PERSON my father 's refrain always was ' philip carteret webb ' , who was the most eminent solicitor of his boyhood and who was an mp .
900copy1STYLE he sent a copy to disraeli , who called it " vindictive and ill-written ... of all the bulgarian horrors perhaps the greatest " .
901mishima1PERSON kirk * solzhenitsyn * koselleck * mishima *
902connections1SET disraeli called them " coffee-house babble " and dismissed allegations of torture by the ottomans since " oriental people usually terminate their connections with culprits in a more expeditious fashion " .
903röpke1UNKNOWN mannheim * jünger * evola * strauss * röpke * gadamer * freyre *
904blackheath1UNKNOWN two years later or so— the exact date has not been ascertained— he was sent as a boarder to rev john potticary 's school at blackheath .
905british control1GROUP in advance of the conference , disraeli sent salisbury private word to seek british military occupation of bulgaria and bosnia , and british control of the ottoman army .
906baron rowton1PERSON among the honours he arranged before resigning as prime minister on 21 april 1880 was one for his private secretary , montagu corry , who became baron rowton .
907crowd1GROUP there , he told the gathered crowd , " lord salisbury and i have brought you back peace— but a peace i hope with honour . "
908dmowski1UNKNOWN disraeli * bismarck * salisbury * dmowski *
909brazil1PLACE belgium * belize * brazil *
910coat1ABSTRACT ENTITY arms caption : coat of arms of benjamin disraeli crest issuant from a wreath of oak proper a castle triple-towered argent .
911sides1ENTITY he reprimanded frere , but left him in charge , attracting fire from all sides .
912closeness1PLACE when disraeli returned as prime minister in 1874 and went to kiss hands , he did so literally , on one knee ; according to richard aldous in his book on the rivalry between disraeli and gladstone , " victoria and disraeli would exploit their closeness for mutual advantage . "
913ignorance1CONDITION disraeli 's early " silver fork " novels vivian grey ( 1826 ) and the young duke ( 1831 ) featured romanticised depictions of aristocratic life ( despite his ignorance of it ) with character sketches of well-known public figures lightly disguised .
914cyprus1PLACE to counterbalance this , britain required a possession in the eastern mediterranean where it might base ships and troops and negotiated with the ottomans for the cession of cyprus .
915dissident liberals1PERSON the conservatives and the dissident liberals repeatedly attacked gladstone 's bill , and in june finally defeated the government ;
916boyhood1STATE my father 's refrain always was ' philip carteret webb ' , who was the most eminent solicitor of his boyhood and who was an mp .
917buckinghamshire1PLACE in the 1847 general election , disraeli stood , successfully , for the buckinghamshire constituency .
918uproar1SOUND disraeli caused an uproar in the congress by making his opening address in english , rather than in french , hitherto accepted as the international language of diplomacy .
919aberdeen government1GOVERNMENT the aberdeen government made this a motion of confidence ;
920memorial speech1SPEECH disraeli has a memorial in westminster abbey , erected by the nation on the motion of gladstone in his memorial speech on disraeli in the house of commons .
921booknotes interview1PERSON external videos video icon booknotes interview with stanley weintraub on disraeli : a biography , february 6 , 1994 , c-span stanley weintraub , in his biography of disraeli , points out that his subject did much to advance britain towards the 20th century , carrying one of the two great reform acts of the 19th despite the opposition of his liberal rival , gladstone .
922word spread1FOOD in berlin , word spread of bismarck 's admiring description of disraeli , " der alte jude , das ist der mann !
923parliamentary sense and1PLACE
924dependent1RESULT as in 1852 , derby led a minority government , dependent on the division of its opponents for survival .
925cautions1ELEMENT roland quinault , however , cautions not to exaggerate the confrontation : they were not direct antagonists for most of their political careers .
926flattery1ACT he told matthew arnold , " everybody likes flattery ; and , when you come to royalty , you should lay it on with a trowel " .
927salazar1PLACE de gasperi * chiang * salazar *
928pen name1NAME
929time gallomania1UNKNOWN moreover , at the time gallomania was published , disraeli was electioneering in high wycombe in the radical interest .
930hostess1PERSON disraeli was elected to the exclusively tory carlton club in 1836 , and was also taken up by the party 's leading hostess , lady londonderry .
931see1PERSON for other uses , see disraeli ( disambiguation ) .
932tory leader1PERSON because of disraeli 's unpopularity among the peelites , no party reconciliation was possible while he remained tory leader in the commons .
933great famine1DEFICIENCY peel hoped that the repeal of the corn laws and the resultant influx of cheaper wheat into britain would relieve the condition of the poor , and in particular the great famine caused by successive failure of potato crops in ireland .
934robert blake1PERSON although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
935future1VALUE disraeli kept labouchere 's majority down to 170 , a good showing that put him in line for a winnable seat in the near future .
936workmen1PERSON disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
937oration1NUMBER according to blake , disraeli " in a brilliant oration of withering invective proceeded to destroy lowe " , who apologised and never held office again .
938titles1ACTION royal titles act main article : royal titles
939protest1GROUP disraeli circa 1870 given gladstone 's majority in the commons , disraeli could do little but protest as the government advanced legislation ; he chose to await liberal mistakes .
940der1PERSON in berlin , word spread of bismarck 's admiring description of disraeli , " der alte jude , das ist der mann !
941fiction disraeli1PERSON in some of his early fiction disraeli also portrayed himself and what he felt to be his byronic dual nature : the poet and the man of action .
942cameron1PERSON cameron * may * osborne * johnson *
943familialism1CONCEPT familialism *
944earthquakes1OCCURRENCE there are occasional earthquakes and ever and again the dark rumbling of the sea . "
945tory candidate1PERSON two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
946navy1PERSON amid war fever in britain , the government asked parliament to vote £6,000,000 to prepare the army and navy for war .
947catholics1UNKNOWN it remained the established church and was funded by direct taxation , which was greatly resented by the catholics and presbyterians .
948essay1PERSON one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
949comedy1UNKNOWN in the same year disraeli published a novel , henrietta temple , which was a love story and social comedy , drawing on his affair with henrietta sykes .
950sinecure1POSITION derby had intended to replace chelmsford once a vacancy in a suitable sinecure developed .
951knights1PERSON refer to caption disraeli ( right ) and salisbury as knights of the garter , portrayed by john tenniel in the pas de deux ( from the scène de triomphe in the grand anglo-turkish ballet d'action )
952boost1PERSON britain 's victory in the second anglo-afghan war proved a boost to disraeli 's government .
953liberal mp nathan rothschild1PERSON disraeli sent the liberal mp nathan rothschild to paris to enquire about buying de lesseps 's shares .
954boer republics1PERSON british policy in south africa was to encourage federation between the british-run cape colony and natal , and the boer republics , the transvaal ( annexed by britain in 1877 ) and the orange free state .
955exclusively tory carlton club1INSTITUTION disraeli was elected to the exclusively tory carlton club in 1836 , and was also taken up by the party 's leading hostess , lady londonderry .
956ones1UNKNOWN disraeli 's political views embraced certain radical policies , particularly electoral reform , and also some tory ones , including protectionism .
957disambiguation1ACT for other uses , see disraeli ( disambiguation ) .
958vajpayee1UNKNOWN suharto * lee * zia * vajpayee *
959zulu1UNKNOWN afghanistan to zululand main articles : second anglo-afghan war and anglo zulu war
960san stefano1PLACE bulgaria as constituted under the san stefano treaty and as divided at berlin with the russians close to constantinople , the turks yielded and in march 1878 , signed the treaty of san stefano , conceding a bulgarian state covering a large part of the balkans .
961bright blue1PERSON bright blue *
962menace1PERSON gladstone , disraeli stated , dominated the scene and " alternated between a menace and a sigh " .
963modi1PERSON kaczyński * netanyahu * modi * putin * abe * bolsonaro * orbán * meloni religion *
964constitution1PERSON his vindication of the english constitution , was published in december 1835 .
965ranke1PERSON savigny * carlyle * ranke * newman *
966pen1PLACE indeed , he had objected to murray about croker 's inserting " high tory " sentiment : disraeli remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of reform can issue from my pen . "
967aims1PERSON disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
968race1RACE disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
969edmund burke1PERSON in addition to the viscounty bestowed on mary anne disraeli , the earldom of beaconsfield was to have been bestowed on edmund burke in 1797 , but he had died before receiving it .
970bank1PLACE rather than seek the aid of the bank of england , disraeli borrowed funds from lionel de rothschild , who took a commission on the deal .
971house disraeli1PERSON russell became prime minister again , with gladstone clearly the liberal party 's leader-in-waiting , and as leader of the house disraeli 's direct opponent .
972founder1PERSON in 2007 parry wrote , " the tory democrat myth did not survive detailed scrutiny by professional historical writing of the 1960s demonstrated that disraeli had very little interest in a programme of social legislation and was very flexible in handling parliamentary reform in 1867 . " despite this , parry sees disraeli , rather than peel , as the founder of the modern conservative party .
973theocritus1PERSON too much so ; in the pride of boyish erudition , i edited the idonisian eclogue of theocritus , wh . was privately printed .
974test1EFFECT disraeli 's political ideas have not stood the test of time.
975meritocracy1GROUP duty * elitism + aristocracy + meritocracy + noblesse oblige *
976willyams1UNKNOWN the disraeli vault also contains the body of sarah brydges willyams , the wife of james brydges willyams of st mawgan .
977attendees1PERSON though many commented on how healthy he looked , it took him great effort to appear so , and when he told the audience he expected to speak to the dinner again the following year , attendees chuckled .
978eastern1PLACE disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
979character st barbe1PERSON disraeli continued to the last to pillory his enemies in barely disguised caricatures : the character st barbe in endymion is widely seen as a parody of thackeray , who had offended disraeli more than thirty years earlier by lampooning him in punch as " codlingsby " .
980voice1DECISION disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
981post1SEQUENCE although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
982outset1EVENT they have from the outset divided critical opinion .
983amendments1EVENT even as disraeli accepted liberal amendments ( although pointedly refusing those moved by gladstone ) that further lowered the property qualification , cranborne was unable to lead an effective rebellion .
984clothes1EVENT a middle-aged man in victorian clothes gladstone in the 1850s disraeli delivered the budget on 3 december 1852 , and prepared to wind up the debate for the government on 16 december—it was customary for the chancellor to have the last word .
985rights1UNKNOWN the whigs derived from the coalition of lords who had forced through the bill of rights 1689 and in some cases were their descendants .
986builder1ARTIFACT the canal was losing money , and an attempt by ferdinand de lesseps , builder of the canal , to raise the tolls had fallen through when the khedive had threatened military force to prevent it , and had also attracted disraeli 's attention .
987bread1PERSON the corn laws imposed a tariff on imported wheat , protecting british farmers from foreign competition , but making the cost of bread artificially high .
988william meredith1PERSON 1830-1837 together with his sister 's fiancé , william meredith , disraeli travelled widely in southern europe and beyond in 1830-31 .
989attachment1STATE disraeli was thus able to square his jewishness with his equally deep attachment to england and her history .
990areas1PLACE the prime minister wanted a deal with the ottomans whereby britain would temporarily occupy strategic areas to deter the russians from war , to be returned on the signing of a peace treaty , but found little support in his cabinet , which favoured partition of the ottoman empire .
991commons elections1POWER disraeli took no public part in the electioneering , it being deemed improper for peers to make speeches to influence commons elections .
992isandlwana1UNKNOWN before they could arrive , on 22 january , a zulu impi ( army ) , moving with great speed and endurance , destroyed a british encampment in south africa in the battle of isandlwana .
993relatives1PERSON the choice of a tory publication was regarded as strange by disraeli 's friends and relatives , who thought him more of a radical .
994small c1PERSON
995far1UNKNOWN disraeli was unwilling to wait , and cairns , in his view , was a far stronger minister .
996anti catholicism1PERSON
997zulus1UNKNOWN disraeli sent general sir garnet wolseley as high commissioner and commander in chief , and cetewayo and the zulus were crushed at the battle of ulundi on 4 july 1879 .
998governor1PERSON the governor of cape colony , sir bartle frere , believing that the federation could not be accomplished until the native tribes acknowledged british rule , made demands on the zulu and their king , cetewayo , which they were certain to reject .
999fondness1QUALITY lyndhurst was an indiscreet gossip with a fondness for intrigue ; this appealed greatly to disraeli , who became his secretary and go-between .
1000murray entitled england1PERSON whig pamphlet edited by john wilson croker and published by murray entitled england and france : or a cure for ministerial gallomania .
1001showing1UNKNOWN disraeli kept labouchere 's majority down to 170 , a good showing that put him in line for a winnable seat in the near future .
1002fujimorism1CONCEPT fujimorism * gaullism * janismo * kaczyzm *
1003expert1PERSON though disappointed at being left on the back benches , he continued his support for peel in 1842 and 1843 , seeking to establish himself as an expert on foreign affairs and international trade .
1004grand anglo turkish ballet d'action1PERSON
1005situation1SITUATION but the situation is still dangerous .
1006oakeshott1PERSON voegelin * oakeshott *
1007commentary1SPEECH ACT disraeli 's literary and political career interacted over his lifetime and fascinated victorian britain , making him " one of the most eminent figures in victorian public life " , and occasioned a large output of commentary .
1008scruton1PERSON sowell * mansfield * scruton *
1009cuba1PLACE colombia * cuba * denmark * finland *
1010value1VALUE it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
1011dissidents1PERSON the dissidents were unwilling to serve under disraeli in the house of commons , and derby formed a third conservative minority government , with disraeli again as chancellor .
1012guild hall1PLACE owing to his infirmities , disraeli was 45 minutes late for the lord mayor 's dinner at the guild hall in november , at which it is customary that the prime minister speaks .
1013edinburghshire1PLACE in december 1878 , gladstone was offered the liberal nomination for edinburghshire , a constituency popularly known as midlothian .
1014desire1EVENT disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
1015pictures1PICTURE in later years , the german chancellor would show visitors to his office three pictures on the wall : " the portrait of my sovereign , there on the right that of my wife , and on the left , there , that of lord beaconsfield " .
1016point1PLACE now we are obliged to work from a new point of departure , and dictate to turkey , who has forfeited all sympathy . "
1017gap1PLACE with coningsby ; or , the new generation ( 1844 ) , disraeli , in blake 's view , " infused the novel genre with political sensibility , espousing the belief that england 's future as a world power depended not on the complacent old guard , but on youthful , idealistic politicians . " sybil ; or , the two nations was less idealistic than coningsby ; the " two nations " of its sub-title referred to the huge economic and social gap between the privileged few and the deprived working classes .
1018french emperor napoleon iii1PERSON palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
1019anglican establishment1EVENT the tories and the anglican establishment were hostile to the bill .
1020ethiopia1PLACE ii of ethiopia under sir robert napier .
1021solzhenitsyn1PERSON kirk * solzhenitsyn * koselleck * mishima *
1022uses1USE for other uses , see disraeli ( disambiguation ) .
1023soundings1ACTION disraeli was cautious in response , as careful soundings of mps brought a negative reaction , and he declined to place such a proposal in the queen 's speech .
1024lord robert cecil1PERSON among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
1025hindutva1UNKNOWN hindutva * islamism *
1026husband albert1PERSON in this , he came into disagreement with the queen , who out of loyalty to her late husband albert preferred broad church teachings .
1027custom1QUANTITY parliaments were then for a seven-year term , and it was the custom not to go to the country until the sixth year unless forced to by events .
1028mrs1UNKNOWN disraeli carried on a long correspondence with mrs .
1029gestures1ACTION disraeli cultivated a public image of himself as an imperialist with grand gestures such as conferring on queen victoria the title " empress of india " .
1030prussian count otto von bismarck1PERSON in 1862 , disraeli met prussian count otto von bismarck and said of him , " be careful about that man , he means what he says " .
1031purely1UNKNOWN second derby government main article : second derby-disraeli ministry derby took office at the head of a purely " conservative " administration , not in coalition .
1032xenophobia1EVENT historian michael diamond asserts that for british music hall patrons in the 1880s and 1890s , " xenophobia and pride in empire " were reflected in the halls ' most popular political heroes : all were conservatives and disraeli stood out above all , even decades after his death , while gladstone was used as a villain .
1033election main article1ARTICLE
1034july serb populations1PERSON
1035inhabitants1PLACE it eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as liverpool and manchester .
1036disposes1PERSON disraeli wrote a personal letter to gladstone , asking him to place the good of the party above personal animosity : " every man performs his office , and there is a power , greater than ourselves , that disposes of all this . "
1037anglicanism1CONCEPT he favoured low church clergymen in promotion , disliking other movements in anglicanism for political reasons .
1038battles1PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
1039love story1PERSON in the same year disraeli published a novel , henrietta temple , which was a love story and social comedy , drawing on his affair with henrietta sykes .
1040party leader1PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
1041mud1MONEY disraeli said of lowe that he was the only person in london with whom he would not shake hands : " he is in the mud and there i leave him . "
1042archibald tait1PERSON when the position of archbishop of canterbury fell vacant , disraeli reluctantly agreed to the queen 's preferred candidate , archibald tait , the bishop of london .
1043interruptions1PERSON the interruptions were fewer , as gladstone gained control of the house , and in the next two hours painted a picture of disraeli as frivolous and his budget as subversive .
1044morning paper1PERSON john murray and j. g. lockhart murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with the times .
1045principle1PERSON he possesses all the necessary requisites of perfidy , selfishness , depravity , want of principle , etc. , which would qualify him for the change .
1046bursting1ACTIVITY the bursting of the mining bubble was ruinous for disraeli .
1047note1ABILITY as parry observes , the book ends on a political note , setting out europe 's progress " from feudal to federal principles " .
1048godfather1PERSON turner stood as godfather when benjamin was baptised , aged twelve , on 31 july 1817 .
1049small1PERSON the wondrous tale of alroy the following year portrayed the problems of a medieval jew in deciding between a small , exclusively jewish state and a large empire embracing all .
1050ottoman territorial integrity1EVENT in spite of this , disraeli 's policy favoured constantinople and ottoman territorial integrity .
1051portrait prime minister1HUMAN ROLE the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
1052criteria1RULE the writer r. w. stewart observed that there have always been two criteria for judging disraeli 's novels— political and artistic .
1053conservatism variants1ABILITY part of a series on conservatism variants * authoritarian *
1054o' connell1PERSON two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
1055all angels1PLACE a statue on a podium statue of disraeli in parliament square , london disraeli is buried with his wife in a vault beneath the church of st michael and all angels which stands in the grounds of his home , hughenden manor .
1056one nation conservatism principles1PERSON
1057eliot1PERSON schmitt * eliot *
1058tory politician1PERSON tory politician with experience of office followed peel , leaving the rump bereft of leadership .
1059nation conservatives caucus1PERSON one nation conservatives caucus * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * flag united kingdom portal * v * t * e portrait of benjamin disraeli by john everett millais , 1881
1060commonplace1STATEMENT sarah bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " .
1061phrase1PHRASE the conservative politician and writer douglas hurd wrote in 2013 , " was not a one-nation conservative— and this was not simply because he never used the phrase .
1062memory1ABSTRACT ENTITY the memory of disraeli was used by the conservatives to appeal to the working classes , with whom he was said to have had a rapport .
1063debate bentinck1PERSON in the aftermath of the debate bentinck resigned the leadership and was succeeded by lord granby ; disraeli 's speech , thought by many of his own party to be blasphemous , ruled him out for the time being .
1064oscar1PERSON in 1929 , actor george arliss won the oscar for personifying disraeli 's " paternalistic , kindly , homely statesmanship " .
1065suffrage1CONCLUSION responding to renewed agitation for popular suffrage , disraeli persuaded a majority of the cabinet to agree to a reform bill .
1066crypto jew1PERSON
1067royal titles1PERSON royal titles act main article : royal titles
1068prescribed1UNKNOWN as a practising jew he could not take the oath of allegiance in the prescribed christian form , and therefore could not take his seat .
1069john tenniel1PERSON refer to caption disraeli ( right ) and salisbury as knights of the garter , portrayed by john tenniel in the pas de deux ( from the scène de triomphe in the grand anglo-turkish ballet d'action )
1070ambassador1ENTITY at the request of the french ambassador , palmerston proposed amending the conspiracy to murder statute to make creating an infernal device a felony .
1071distinction1SOUND he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
1072northcote disraeli1PERSON two gentlemen , the second bearded derby ( top ) and northcote disraeli 's cabinet of twelve , with six peers and six commoners , was the smallest since reform .
1073base1ABSTRACT ENTITY to counterbalance this , britain required a possession in the eastern mediterranean where it might base ships and troops and negotiated with the ottomans for the cession of cyprus .
1074poem1PERSON blake commented that disraeli " produced an epic poem , unbelievably bad , and a five-act blank verse tragedy , if possible worse .
1075englishmen1UNKNOWN when the american civil war began in 1861 , disraeli said little publicly , but like most englishmen expected the south to win .
1076cause1CAUSE in the early 1830s the tories and the interests they represented appeared to be a lost cause .
1077county constituency1PERSON the possession of a country house and incumbency of a county constituency were regarded as essential for a tory with leadership ambitions .
1078doubt1STATE it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
1079netherlands1PLACE mexico * netherlands * new zealand * norway * pakistan * panama * peru * poland *
1080profile1EVENT after this unpromising start disraeli kept a low profile for the rest of the parliamentary session .
1081bulgarian town1PLACE congress of berlin main article : congress of berlin the russians pushed through ottoman territory and by december 1877 had captured the strategic bulgarian town of plevna .
1082together1UNKNOWN 1830-1837 together with his sister 's fiancé , william meredith , disraeli travelled widely in southern europe and beyond in 1830-31 .
1083discourse1QUANTITY further he wrote a discourse on political theory and a political biography , the life of lord george bentinck , which is excellent ... remarkably fair and accurate . "
1084public health act1ACT also enacted were the public health act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the sale of food and drugs act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education act 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict . c. 70 ) .
1085growth1INCREASE he was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the church of england over to the pope .
1086search1ACTION he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
1087antony sher1PERSON in the 1997 film mrs brown , disraeli was played by antony sher .
1088subaltern1UNKNOWN the duke of argyll wrote that disraeli " was like a subaltern in a great battle where every superior officer was killed or wounded " .
1089saffet pasha1PERSON four men international delegates at the constantinople conference : clockwise from top left , saffet pasha ( turkey ) , general ignatieff ( russia ) , lord salisbury ( britain ) and the comte de chaudordy ( france )
1090elementary education act1ACT also enacted were the public health act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the sale of food and drugs act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education act 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict . c. 70 ) .
1091visit1EVENT disraeli declined a visit from the queen , saying , " she would only ask me to take a message to albert . "
1092date1RESULT two years later or so— the exact date has not been ascertained— he was sent as a boarder to rev john potticary 's school at blackheath .
1093answer1PERSON when the afghans made no answer , lord cranbrook as secretary of state for war , ordered the advance against them in the second anglo-afghan war .
1094diary1ABSTRACT ENTITY gladstone called several times to enquire about his rival 's condition , and wrote in his diary , " may the almighty be near his pillow . "
1095pbs1UNKNOWN presented in the u.s. on pbs 's masterpiece
1096j. g. lockhart murray1PERSON john murray and j. g. lockhart murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with the times .
1097commander1PERSON disraeli sent general sir garnet wolseley as high commissioner and commander in chief , and cetewayo and the zulus were crushed at the battle of ulundi on 4 july 1879 .
1098coalitions1GROUP " i face a coalition ... this , too , i know , that england does not love coalitions . "
1099emmy award1ACT theatre in 1980 , it was nominated for the emmy award for outstanding limited series .
1100jabotinsky1PERSON spengler * jabotinsky *
1101father in law1PERSON
1102advocates1PERSON a small number of radicals , generally from northern constituencies , were the strongest advocates of continuing reform .
1103improper1UNKNOWN disraeli took no public part in the electioneering , it being deemed improper for peers to make speeches to influence commons elections .
1104second disraeli ministry1INSTITUTION second term main articles : second premiership of benjamin disraeli and second disraeli ministry
1105singapore1PLACE russia * serbia * singapore * sweden *
1106burglar1PERSON paul smith , in his journal article on disraeli 's politics , argues that disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the british political pantheon . "
1107chiang1PLACE de gasperi * chiang * salazar *
1108schylus1UNKNOWN dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
1109steps1NAME this was quieted as disraeli took steps to assert his leadership , and as divisions among the liberals became clear .
1110boarder1PERSON two years later or so— the exact date has not been ascertained— he was sent as a boarder to rev john potticary 's school at blackheath .
1111communitarianism1CONCEPT clerical fascism * communitarianism *
1112victorian1PERSON two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
1113finland1PLACE colombia * cuba * denmark * finland *
1114cape colony1PERSON british policy in south africa was to encourage federation between the british-run cape colony and natal , and the boer republics , the transvaal ( annexed by britain in 1877 ) and the orange free state .
1115party rival1PERSON in the absence of a credible party rival and for fear of having an election called on the issue , conservatives felt obliged to support disraeli despite their misgivings .
1116sixth year1PERIOD parliaments were then for a seven-year term , and it was the custom not to go to the country until the sixth year unless forced to by events .
1117metaxas1PERSON metaxas * churchill * adenauer *
1118negotiation1PROCESS of the peers , five of them had been in disraeli 's 1868 cabinet ; the sixth , lord salisbury , was reconciled to disraeli after negotiation and became secretary of state for india .
1119argyll1PERSON the duke of argyll wrote that disraeli " was like a subaltern in a great battle where every superior officer was killed or wounded " .
1120exposition1AGREEMENT whig as hero , is a last exposition of the author 's economic policies and political beliefs .
1121application1ACT gladstone 's biographer philip magnus contrasted disraeli 's grasp of foreign affairs with that of gladstone , who " never understood that high moral principles , in their application to foreign policy , are more often destructive of political stability than motives of national self-interest . "
1122bulletins1INFORMATION despite the gravity of disraeli 's condition , the doctors concocted optimistic bulletins for public consumption .
1123thatcherism1CONCEPT sarkozysm * thatcherism * trumpism * ziaism national variants *
1124midlothian campaign1PERSON on his advice , gladstone accepted the offer in january 1879 , and later that year began his midlothian campaign , speaking not only in edinburgh , but across britain , attacking disraeli , to huge crowds .
1125diplomacy1BRANCH disraeli caused an uproar in the congress by making his opening address in english , rather than in french , hitherto accepted as the international language of diplomacy .
1126gasperi1PERSON de gasperi * chiang * salazar *
1127risorgimento1UNKNOWN it reflected anti-catholicism of the sort that was popular in britain , and which fueled support for italian unification ( " risorgimento " ) .
1128press1INSTITUTION daniel o'connell , misled by inaccurate press reports , thought disraeli had slandered him while electioneering at taunton ; he launched an outspoken attack , referring to disraeli as : a reptile ...
1129agriculture1STUDY conservative chances of re-election were damaged by the poor weather , and consequent effects on agriculture .
1130domain1LAND victoria had long wished to have an imperial title , reflecting britain 's expanding domain .
1131schemes1CONDITION he had far-reaching schemes but little administrative ability , and there was some foundation for napoleon
1132revolutionary1PERSON palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
1133rank1RANK she was irked when tsar alexander ii held a higher rank than her as an emperor , and was appalled that her daughter , the prussian crown princess , would outrank her when her husband came to the throne .
1134teaching1ACT black conservatism + us * catholic social teaching * clericalism *
1135hair portrait1PERSON a young man of vaguely semitic appearance , with long and curly black hair portrait of benjamin disraeli by francis grant .
1136richard aldous1PERSON when disraeli returned as prime minister in 1874 and went to kiss hands , he did so literally , on one knee ; according to richard aldous in his book on the rivalry between disraeli and gladstone , " victoria and disraeli would exploit their closeness for mutual advantage . "
1137rites1EVENT protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
1138abbott1PERSON in 1972 b. h. abbott stressed that it was not disraeli but lord randolph churchill who invented the term " tory democracy " , though it was disraeli who made it an essential part of conservative policy and philosophy .
1139sketches1SPEECH ACT disraeli 's early " silver fork " novels vivian grey ( 1826 ) and the young duke ( 1831 ) featured romanticised depictions of aristocratic life ( despite his ignorance of it ) with character sketches of well-known public figures lightly disguised .
1140boy1PERSON from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
1141adenauer1PERSON metaxas * churchill * adenauer *
1142removal1ACT opposition and third term as chancellor main article : third derby-disraeli ministry after derby 's second ejection from office , disraeli faced dissension within conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister warned disraeli of some mps seeking his removal from the front bench .
1143rumours1STATEMENT despite rumours about palmerston 's health as he turned 80 , he remained personally popular , and the liberals increased their margin in the july 1865 general election .
1144scène de triomphe1GAME refer to caption disraeli ( right ) and salisbury as knights of the garter , portrayed by john tenniel in the pas de deux ( from the scène de triomphe in the grand anglo-turkish ballet d'action )
1145tait1PERSON when the position of archbishop of canterbury fell vacant , disraeli reluctantly agreed to the queen 's preferred candidate , archibald tait , the bishop of london .
1146heroine1PERSON it draws on the events of his affair with henrietta sykes to tell the story of a debt-ridden young man torn between a mercenary loveless marriage and a passionate love at first sight for the eponymous heroine .
1147india act1ACT the government of india act 1858 ended the role of the east india company in governing the subcontinent .
1148incense1EVENT he was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the church of england over to the pope .
1149baptism1ACT it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
1150isma1PERSON built by french interests , 56 % of the stocks in the canal remained in their hands , while 44 % of the stock belonged to isma 'il pasha , the khedive of egypt .
1151british prime minister1HUMAN ROLE he is the only british prime minister to have been born jewish .
1152crime1EVENT act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
1153sephardi aristocracy1SET disraeli convinced himself ( wrongly ) that he derived from the sephardi aristocracy of iberian jews driven from spain at the end of the fifteenth century .
1154bishop blomfield1PERSON dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
1155basevi1UNKNOWN isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
1156wave1WAVE conservative feminism * conservative socialism * conservative wave *
1157novels vivian grey1PERSON disraeli 's early " silver fork " novels vivian grey ( 1826 ) and the young duke ( 1831 ) featured romanticised depictions of aristocratic life ( despite his ignorance of it ) with character sketches of well-known public figures lightly disguised .
1158gossip1PERSON lyndhurst was an indiscreet gossip with a fondness for intrigue ; this appealed greatly to disraeli , who became his secretary and go-between .
1159scene1SET gladstone , disraeli stated , dominated the scene and " alternated between a menace and a sigh " .
1160anti communism1PERSON
1161disaster1EVENT disraeli wrote the next day , " the terrible disaster has shaken me to the centre " .
1162jewish1UNKNOWN he is the only british prime minister to have been born jewish .
1163grip1PERSON palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
1164world affairs1PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
1165lord cairns1PERSON he made only two major changes in the cabinet : he replaced lord chelmsford as lord chancellor with lord cairns and brought in george ward hunt as chancellor of the exchequer .
1166peeress1UNKNOWN through 1872 the eighty-year-old peeress had stomach cancer .
1167luxembourg1PLACE luxembourg * malaysia *
1168adams1PERSON adams * pitt * canning * metternich *
1169irish1PERSON the irish mp
1170elections1POWER blake , however , pointed out that results in local elections had been moving against the conservatives , and doubted if disraeli missed any great opportunity by waiting .
1171death mask1PLACE a death mask resembling disraeli disraeli 's death mask a grave disraeli 's tomb at hughenden returning to hughenden , disraeli brooded over his electoral dismissal , but also resumed work on endymion , which he had begun in 1872 and laid aside before the 1874 election .
1172existence1ENTITY disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
1173pendent1UNKNOWN or sinister a lion or each gorged with a collar gules and pendent therefrom an escutcheon of the last charged with a tower argent .
1174ferdinand de lesseps1PERSON the canal was losing money , and an attempt by ferdinand de lesseps , builder of the canal , to raise the tolls had fallen through when the khedive had threatened military force to prevent it , and had also attracted disraeli 's attention .
1175anglican1UNKNOWN his father left judaism after a dispute at his synagogue ; benjamin became an anglican at the age of 12 .
1176bessarabia1UNKNOWN the russians were willing to make changes to the big bulgaria , but were determined to retain their new possessions , bessarabia in europe and batum and kars on the east coast of the black sea .
1177guard1NUMBER with coningsby ; or , the new generation ( 1844 ) , disraeli , in blake 's view , " infused the novel genre with political sensibility , espousing the belief that england 's future as a world power depended not on the complacent old guard , but on youthful , idealistic politicians . " sybil ; or , the two nations was less idealistic than coningsby ; the " two nations " of its sub-title referred to the huge economic and social gap between the privileged few and the deprived working classes .
1178charter organisations1PERSON industrial charter organisations *
1179by elections1POWER
1180mockery1PERSON gladstone had absented himself from the funeral , with his plea of the press of public business met with public mockery .
1181reserves1UNKNOWN the cabinet discussed disraeli 's proposal to position indian troops at malta for possible transit to the balkans and call out reserves .
1182cession1EVENT to counterbalance this , britain required a possession in the eastern mediterranean where it might base ships and troops and negotiated with the ottomans for the cession of cyprus .
1183india lord lytton1PLACE the viceroy of india lord lytton concealed his plans to issue this ultimatum from disraeli , and when the prime minister insisted he take no action , went ahead anyway .
1184ranks1RANK opposition and third term as chancellor main article : third derby-disraeli ministry after derby 's second ejection from office , disraeli faced dissension within conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister warned disraeli of some mps seeking his removal from the front bench .
1185novelty1EVENT a work of fiction by a former prime minister was a novelty for britain , and the book became a bestseller .
1186pessimism1STATE despite this pessimism , conservatives hopes were buoyed in early 1880 with successes in by-elections the liberals had expected to win , concluding with victory in southwark , normally a liberal stronghold .
1187agitation1PROPERTY responding to renewed agitation for popular suffrage , disraeli persuaded a majority of the cabinet to agree to a reform bill .
1188affection1EMOTION disraeli 's courage , quickness of wit , capacity for affection , and freedom from sordid motives earned him his position .
1189resolution1EVENT the british military efforts were marked by bungling , and in 1855 a restive parliament considered a resolution to establish a committee on the conduct of the war .
1190lodgers1PERSON it extended the franchise by 938,427 men—an increase of 88% —by giving the vote to male householders and male lodgers paying at least £10 for rooms .
1191bestseller1COLLECTION a work of fiction by a former prime minister was a novelty for britain , and the book became a bestseller .
1192sabres1LIGHT balkans and bulgaria cavalry wielding sabres fight men with guns on foot fight in
1193reproach1CAUSE i do not use it as a term of reproach ; there are many most respectable jews .
1194benjamin senior1PERSON after benjamin senior died in 1816 , isaac felt free to leave the congregation following a second dispute .
1195british power1POWER a later foreign secretary , lord curzon , described the canal in 1909 as " the determining influence of every considerable movement of british power to the east and south of the mediterranean " .
1196depravity1ACT he possesses all the necessary requisites of perfidy , selfishness , depravity , want of principle , etc. , which would qualify him for the change .
1197arrangement1ARRANGEMENT this confused arrangement ended with granby 's resignation in 1851 ; disraeli effectively ignored the two men regardless .
1198june prime minister1HUMAN ROLE
1199allegations1ACT disraeli called them " coffee-house babble " and dismissed allegations of torture by the ottomans since " oriental people usually terminate their connections with culprits in a more expeditious fashion " .
1200householders1PERSON it extended the franchise by 938,427 men—an increase of 88% —by giving the vote to male householders and male lodgers paying at least £10 for rooms .
1201characters1FORCE his other novel of this period is venetia , a romance based on the characters of shelley and byron , written quickly to raise much-needed money .
1202bonald1PERSON more * maistre * bonald * chateaubriand *
1203reaganism1CONCEPT qutbism + khomeinism * reaganism *
1204mudlark1UNKNOWN alec guinness portrayed him in the mudlark ( 1950 ) .
1205ruler1PLACE under lord roberts , the british easily defeated them and installed a new ruler , leaving a mission and garrison in kabul .
1206consolation1INSTANCE in the past , the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times , but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the united states , grain prices remained low .
1207businessmen1PERSON they held that the landed interests should use their power to protect the poor from exploitation by middle-class businessmen .
1208mocattas1UNKNOWN he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
1209osborne1PERSON disraeli went to osborne house on the isle of wight , where the queen asked him to form a government .
1210intermediaries1PERSON he carried on a correspondence with victoria , with letters passed through intermediaries .
1211dismissal1PERSON a death mask resembling disraeli disraeli 's death mask a grave disraeli 's tomb at hughenden returning to hughenden , disraeli brooded over his electoral dismissal , but also resumed work on endymion , which he had begun in 1872 and laid aside before the 1874 election .
1212ambitions1EVENT john murray and j. g. lockhart murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with the times .
1213election campaign1PERSON the other was wyndham lewis , who helped finance disraeli 's election campaign , and who died the following year .
1214hungary1PLACE hungary * iceland * india * iran * israel *
1215reinforcements1PERMISSION disraeli and the cabinet reluctantly backed him , and in early january 1879 resolved to send reinforcements .
1216discord1SOUND the films created " a facsimile world where existing values were invariably validated by events in the film and where all discord could be turned into harmony by an acceptance of the status quo " .
1217gender roles1ROLE gender roles + complementarianism + essentialism *
1218detention1RESOURCE disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
1219sickness1EMOTION as it became clear that this might be his final sickness , friends and opponents alike came to call .
1220irritation1STATE he neglected to notify either the prince of wales or the opposition and was met by irritation from the prince and a full-scale attack from the liberals .
1221walthamstow1UNKNOWN the school chosen for him was run by eliezer cogan at higham hill in walthamstow .
1222body1BODY the disraeli vault also contains the body of sarah brydges willyams , the wife of james brydges willyams of st mawgan .
1223liberal1PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
1224mighty prototype1DOCUMENT english toryism was ' copied from the mighty prototype ' ( coningsby , bk 4 , chap.
1225historian llewellyn woodward1PERSON historian llewellyn woodward has evaluated disraeli :
1226endurance1DISTANCE before they could arrive , on 22 january , a zulu impi ( army ) , moving with great speed and endurance , destroyed a british encampment in south africa in the battle of isandlwana .
1227chambers1NUMBER he enrolled as a student at lincoln 's inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , nathaniel basevy , and then those of benjamin austen , who persuaded isaac that disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
1228parliament back bencher1PERSON
1229origins1PERSON he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
1230maurras1UNKNOWN baldwin * maurras * horthy *
1231match1FORM t f maples was not only the young disraeli 's employer and a friend of his father , but also his prospective father-in-law : isaac and maples considered that the latter 's only daughter might be a suitable match for benjamin .
1232executions1CONDITION it ended public executions , and the corrupt practices
1233chances1QUALITY conservative chances of re-election were damaged by the poor weather , and consequent effects on agriculture .
1234british east india company1INSTITUTION when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
1235savigny1UNKNOWN savigny * carlyle * ranke * newman *
1236purpose1PURPOSE disraeli 's overall purpose was to enact policies which would benefit the working classes , making his party more attractive to them .
1237congregation1ENTITY after benjamin senior died in 1816 , isaac felt free to leave the congregation following a second dispute .
1238basis1RESULT disraeli had supported the efforts of party manager john eldon gorst to put the administration of the conservative party on a modern basis .
1239uniqueness1STATE ..presenting himself as jewish symbolized disraeli 's uniqueness when he was fighting for respect , and explained his set-backs .
1240liberal earl1PERSON the small scottish electorate was dominated by two noblemen , the conservative duke of buccleuch and the liberal earl of rosebery .
1241bed1UNKNOWN in march , he fell ill with bronchitis , and emerged from bed only for a meeting with salisbury and other conservative leaders on the 26th .
1242islington1PLACE from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
1243brave1PERSON disraeli spoke in favour of the measure , arguing that christianity was " completed judaism " , and asking the house of commons " where is your christianity if you do not believe in their judaism ? " russell and disraeli 's future rival gladstone thought this brave ; the speech was badly received by his own party .
1244qualities1QUALITY in the event , the speech was a model of its kind , in which he avoided comment on disraeli 's politics while praising his personal qualities .
1245asset1ASSET blake argued that disraeli 's imperialism " decisively orientated the conservative party for many years to come , and the tradition which he started was probably a bigger electoral asset in winning working-class support during the last quarter of the century than anything else " .
1246descendants1ELEMENT the whigs derived from the coalition of lords who had forced through the bill of rights 1689 and in some cases were their descendants .
1247family history1UNIT historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
1248isaac cardoso1PERSON he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
1249pasha1PERSON built by french interests , 56 % of the stocks in the canal remained in their hands , while 44 % of the stock belonged to isma 'il pasha , the khedive of egypt .
1250alt1SOUND right-wing politics + alt + authoritarianism + centre + dictatorship + far + new * small-c conservative * toryism * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * v * t * e novels * vivian grey ( 1826 , revised 1853 ) *
1251artist1PERSON it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
1252economics1UNKNOWN the imperialism of his later years was equally superficial : an interpretation of politics without economics .
1253sovereign1PERSON in later years , the german chancellor would show visitors to his office three pictures on the wall : " the portrait of my sovereign , there on the right that of my wife , and on the left , there , that of lord beaconsfield " .
1254friend sharon turner1PERSON isaac 's friend sharon turner , a solicitor , convinced him that although he could comfortably remain unattached to any formal religion it would be disadvantageous to the children if they did so .
1255mercantile background1INFORMATION the family was mostly from italy , of sephardic jewish mercantile background .
1256whig member1PERSON he did not defeat the incumbent whig member , henry labouchere , but the taunton constituency was regarded as unwinnable by the tories .
1257senior1PERSON after benjamin senior died in 1816 , isaac felt free to leave the congregation following a second dispute .
1258canterbury1PLACE when the position of archbishop of canterbury fell vacant , disraeli reluctantly agreed to the queen 's preferred candidate , archibald tait , the bishop of london .
1259traditional1UNKNOWN tory democrat : the 1867 reform act it was disraeli 's belief that if given the vote british people would use it instinctively to put their natural and traditional rulers , the gentlemen of the conservative party , into power .
1260prices1AMOUNT in the past , the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times , but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the united states , grain prices remained low .
1261adds1PERSON he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
1262benjamin austen1PERSON he enrolled as a student at lincoln 's inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , nathaniel basevy , and then those of benjamin austen , who persuaded isaac that disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
1263lord chelmsford1PERSON he made only two major changes in the cabinet : he replaced lord chelmsford as lord chancellor with lord cairns and brought in george ward hunt as chancellor of the exchequer .
1264cash1PERSON venetia ( 1837 ) was a minor work , written to raise much-needed cash .
1265division1PERSON as in 1852 , derby led a minority government , dependent on the division of its opponents for survival .
1266electorate1PERSON the small scottish electorate was dominated by two noblemen , the conservative duke of buccleuch and the liberal earl of rosebery .
1267venture1PERSON the public saw the venture as a daring statement of british dominance of the seas .
1268nationalists1PERSON his targets included the whigs , collectively and individually , irish nationalists , and political corruption .
1269lord cranbrook1PERSON when the afghans made no answer , lord cranbrook as secretary of state for war , ordered the advance against them in the second anglo-afghan war .
1270c span stanley weintraub1PERSON
1271clergyman1DEVICE urged by a clergyman to turn her thoughts to jesus christ in her final days , she said she could not : " you know dizzy is my j.c. " in 1873 , gladstone brought forward legislation to establish a catholic university in dublin .
1272partisan significance1PURPOSE although their paths diverged over the repeal of the corn laws in 1846 and later over fiscal policy more generally , it was not until the later 1860s that their differences over parliamentary reform , irish and church policy assumed great partisan significance .
1273personality1SET his singular and complex personality has provided historians and biographers with a particularly stiff challenge .
1274incumbency1ACT the possession of a country house and incumbency of a county constituency were regarded as essential for a tory with leadership ambitions .
1275slump1ACTIVITY amid an economic slump generally , the conservatives lost support among farmers .
1276non fiction1STATEMENT
1277lockhart1PERSON john murray and j. g. lockhart murray had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with the times .
1278champions1PERSON with what derby cautioned was " a leap in the dark " , disraeli had outflanked the liberals who , as the supposed champions of reform , dared not oppose him .
1279bernard glassman1PERSON historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
1280grain prices1AMOUNT in the past , the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times , but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the united states , grain prices remained low .
1281powers1POWER disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
1282chancellor—in part1PART although the budget did not contain protectionist features , the opposition was prepared to destroy it— and disraeli 's career as chancellor—in part out of revenge for his actions against peel in 1846 .
1283intransigence1EVENT by one account , when met with russian intransigence , disraeli told his secretary to order a special train to return them home to begin the war .
1284greatness1STATE film historian roy armes has argued that historical films helped maintain the political status quo in britain in the 1920s and 1930s by imposing an establishment viewpoint that emphasized the greatness of monarchy , empire , and tradition .
1285trilogy1SET in the 1840s disraeli wrote a trilogy of novels with political themes .
1286face1PORTION spain was losing its south american colonies in the face of rebellions .
1287metaxism1CONCEPT maurrassisme * mellismo * metaxism *
1288asthma1CONDITION because of his asthma and gout , disraeli went out as little as possible , fearing more serious episodes of illness .
1289kuhn1PERSON the critic william kuhn suggests that disraeli 's fiction can be read as " the memoirs he never wrote " , revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard to what kuhn sees as the author 's " ambiguous sexuality " .
1290statement1STATEMENT the public saw the venture as a daring statement of british dominance of the seas .
1291lord odo russell1PERSON by one account , the british ambassador in berlin , lord odo russell , hoping to spare the delegates disraeli 's very poor french accent , told disraeli that the congress was hoping to hear a speech in english by one of its masters .
1292outstanding limited series1SERIES theatre in 1980 , it was nominated for the emmy award for outstanding limited series .
1293child1PERSON king 's road , bedford row , bloomsbury , london , the second child and eldest son of isaac d' israeli , a literary critic and historian , and maria ( miriam ) , née basevi .
1294broad church teachings1PERSON in this , he came into disagreement with the queen , who out of loyalty to her late husband albert preferred broad church teachings .
1295appointment granby1PERSON within a month of his appointment granby resigned the leadership in the commons and the party functioned without a leader in the commons for the rest of the session .
1296itv series number1NUMBER pasco played disraeli in the itv series number 10 in 1983 .
1297names1NAME " these are not names i can put before the queen . "
1298charlatan1PERSON disraeli fascinated and divided contemporary opinion ; he was seen by many , including some members of his own party , as an adventurer and a charlatan and by others as a far-sighted and patriotic statesman .
1299quarter century1PERIOD among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
1300devout member1PERSON isaac 's father , benjamin , was a prominent and devout member ; it was probably out of respect for him that isaac did not leave when he fell out with the synagogue authorities in 1813 .
1301superior officer1TERM the duke of argyll wrote that disraeli " was like a subaltern in a great battle where every superior officer was killed or wounded " .
1302michael ragussis1PERSON he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
1303lull1PERIOD the start of the crimean war in 1854 caused a lull in party politics ;
1304actor george arliss1PERSON in 1929 , actor george arliss won the oscar for personifying disraeli 's " paternalistic , kindly , homely statesmanship " .
1305tewodros1PERSON disraeli sent the successful expedition against tewodros
1306loathing1EVENT it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
1307rothschild1PERSON russell , rothschild , manners and granby
1308honours1UNKNOWN despite his public confidence , disraeli recognised that the conservatives would probably lose the next election and was already contemplating his resignation honours .
1309system1SYSTEM amendments to the school law , the scottish legal system , and the railway laws were passed .
1310proportion1STATEMENT fielding says arliss " personified the kind of paternalistic , kindly , homely statesmanship that appealed to a significant proportion of the cinema audience ...
1311crops1NUMBER peel hoped that the repeal of the corn laws and the resultant influx of cheaper wheat into britain would relieve the condition of the poor , and in particular the great famine caused by successive failure of potato crops in ireland .
1312triumvirate1UNKNOWN at the start of the next session , affairs were handled by a triumvirate of granby , disraeli , and john charles herries— indicative of the tension between disraeli and the rest of the party , who needed his talents but mistrusted him .
1313adventurer1PERSON disraeli fascinated and divided contemporary opinion ; he was seen by many , including some members of his own party , as an adventurer and a charlatan and by others as a far-sighted and patriotic statesman .
1314government posts1UNKNOWN as he had in government posts , disraeli rewarded old friends with clerical positions , making sydney turner , son of a good friend of isaac d' israeli , dean of ripon .
1315frustration1PERSON aberdeen resigned , and the queen sent for derby , who to disraeli 's frustration refused to take office .
1316blood1STATE as zulu troops could not marry until they had washed their spears in blood , they were eager for combat .
1317policy legislation1PERSON domestic policy legislation
1318party conservative1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
1319premierships1POSITION as the new session of parliament approached in february 1868 , he was unable to leave his home but was reluctant to resign , as at 68 he was much younger than either palmerston or russell at the end of their premierships .
1320kaczyzm1UNKNOWN fujimorism * gaullism * janismo * kaczyzm *
1321sharp1PERSON bright , peel , bentinck and stanley disraeli gradually became a sharp critic of peel 's government , often deliberately taking contrary positions .
1322rebellions1FORCE spain was losing its south american colonies in the face of rebellions .
1323aid1QUANTITY rather than seek the aid of the bank of england , disraeli borrowed funds from lionel de rothschild , who took a commission on the deal .
1324statute1PERSON at the request of the french ambassador , palmerston proposed amending the conspiracy to murder statute to make creating an infernal device a felony .
1325device1DEVICE at the request of the french ambassador , palmerston proposed amending the conspiracy to murder statute to make creating an infernal device a felony .
1326vestments1UNKNOWN he was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the church of england over to the pope .
1327procession1STATE despite having been offered a state funeral by queen victoria , disraeli 's executors decided against a public procession and funeral , fearing that too large crowds would gather to do him honour .
1328british ambassador1ENTITY by one account , the british ambassador in berlin , lord odo russell , hoping to spare the delegates disraeli 's very poor french accent , told disraeli that the congress was hoping to hear a speech in english by one of its masters .
1329discipline1DISCIPLINE culture of life + pro-life * discipline *
1330mass1QUANTITY on gorst 's advice , disraeli gave a speech to a mass meeting in manchester that year .
1331church policy1PERSON although their paths diverged over the repeal of the corn laws in 1846 and later over fiscal policy more generally , it was not until the later 1860s that their differences over parliamentary reform , irish and church policy assumed great partisan significance .
1332disraeli vault1PERSON the disraeli vault also contains the body of sarah brydges willyams , the wife of james brydges willyams of st mawgan .
1333britons1UNKNOWN the jingoistic attitude of many britons increased disraeli 's political support , and the queen showed her favour by visiting him at hughenden — the first time she had visited the country home of her prime minister since the melbourne ministry .
1334example1ABSTRACT ENTITY for example , disraeli made political appointments to positions previously given to career civil servants .
1335sectarianism1EVENT one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
1336higham hill1HILL the school chosen for him was run by eliezer cogan at higham hill in walthamstow .
1337creation1EVENT he played a central role in the creation of the modern conservative party , defining its policies and its broad outreach .
1338sultan abdülaziz1UNKNOWN the following january , sultan abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by hungarian statesman julius andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in serbia and bulgaria .
1339trip1POSITION the trip was financed partly by another high society novel , the young duke , written in 1829-30 .
1340root1ARTIFACT in the years after disraeli 's death , as salisbury began his reign of more than twenty years over the conservatives , the party emphasised the late leader 's " one nation " views , that the conservatives at root shared the beliefs of the working classes , with the liberals the party of the urban élite .
1341corrupt practices act1ACT
1342leadership ambitions1EVENT the possession of a country house and incumbency of a county constituency were regarded as essential for a tory with leadership ambitions .
1343young england trilogy1PERSON falconet ( unfinished , 1881 ; posthumously published in 1905 ) young england trilogy 1 .
1344genre1UNKNOWN with coningsby ; or , the new generation ( 1844 ) , disraeli , in blake 's view , " infused the novel genre with political sensibility , espousing the belief that england 's future as a world power depended not on the complacent old guard , but on youthful , idealistic politicians . " sybil ; or , the two nations was less idealistic than coningsby ; the " two nations " of its sub-title referred to the huge economic and social gap between the privileged few and the deprived working classes .
1345john jackson1PERSON disraeli disliked wilberforce and instead appointed john jackson , the bishop of lincoln .
1346platitudes1STATEMENT his detachment from english prejudices did not give him any particular insight into foreign affairs ; as a young man he accepted the platitudes of metternich and failed to understand the meaning of the nationalist movements in europe .
1347banker1PLACE on 14 november 1875 , the editor of the pall mall gazette , frederick greenwood , learned from london banker henry oppenheim that the khedive was seeking to sell his shares in the suez canal company to a french firm .
1348purchase1AMOUNT disraeli arranged for the british to purchase a major interest in the suez canal company in egypt .
1349widespread acclaim1STATEMENT after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
1350grade1PERSON but there are , as in every other people , some of the lowest and most disgusting grade of moral turpitude ; and of those i look upon mr . disraeli as the worst .
1351nationalisation1ACT it authorised an early version of nationalisation , having the post office buy up the telegraph companies .
1352plea1STATEMENT gladstone had absented himself from the funeral , with his plea of the press of public business met with public mockery .
1353minister sir winston churchill1PERSON protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
1354reason1EVENT stanley , in contrast , deprecated his inexperienced followers as a reason for not assuming office :
1355winner1PERSON instead , the election later that month had no clear winner , and the derby government held to power pending the meeting of parliament .
1356transaction1SUBSTANCE the banker 's capital was at risk as parliament could have refused to ratify the transaction .
1357opponent1PERSON a young man with dark hair and huge sideburns lord robert cecil , disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli led a toothless opposition in the commons—seeing no way of unseating palmerston , derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
1358officers1TERM act instituted sanitary inspectors and medical officers .
1359debacle1EVENT disraeli could not pay off the last of his debts from this debacle until 1849 .
1360biographer bernard glassman1PERSON his reasons are unknown , but the biographer bernard glassman surmises that it was to avoid being confused with his father .
1361royal titles bill1PERSON the queen prevailed upon disraeli to introduce a royal titles bill , and also told of her intent to open parliament in person , which during this time she did only when she wanted something from legislators .
1362style1STYLE he wrote regular reports on proceedings in the commons to victoria , who described them as " very curious " and " much in the style of his books " .
1363borough constituencies1PERSON parliament was dissolved on 24 march ; the first borough constituencies began voting a week later .
1364register1UNIT first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
1365duties1ATTITUDE derby knew that his " attacks of illness would , at no distant period , incapacitate me from the discharge of my public duties " ; doctors had warned him that his health required his resignation .
1366dissensions1CONDITION the whigs were wracked by internal dissensions during the second half of 1851 , much of which parliament spent in recess .
1367servants1PERSON for example , disraeli made political appointments to positions previously given to career civil servants .
1368anathema1PERSON the other great party , the whigs , were anathema to disraeli : " toryism is worn out & i cannot condescend to be a whig . "
1369liberal chancellor robert lowe1PERSON an old enemy of disraeli , former liberal chancellor robert lowe , alleged during the debate in the commons that two previous prime ministers had refused to introduce such legislation for the queen .
1370south korea1PLACE south korea * taiwan * turkey * ukraine * united kingdom * united states related ideologies * agrarianism *
1371minutes1PERIOD owing to his infirmities , disraeli was 45 minutes late for the lord mayor 's dinner at the guild hall in november , at which it is customary that the prime minister speaks .
1372february december1PERIOD
1373politics nearer1PART he brought politics nearer to poetry , or , at all events , to poetical prose , than any english politician since burke .
1374satire1DEVICE disraeli made many changes , softening his satire , but the damage to his reputation proved long-lasting .
1375suggestion1SUGGESTION on their return to england he left the solicitors , at the suggestion of maples , with the aim of qualifying as a barrister .
1376codes1PERSON also enacted were the public health act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the sale of food and drugs act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education act 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict . c. 70 ) .
1377baronet1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
1378climb1FORCE he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
1379tsar alexander ii1PERSON she was irked when tsar alexander ii held a higher rank than her as an emperor , and was appalled that her daughter , the prussian crown princess , would outrank her when her husband came to the throne .
1380liberty1PERSON norms + customs + mores * ordered liberty *
1381homes1PERSON disraeli and his wife alternated between hughenden and several homes in london for the rest of their marriage .
1382year disraeli1PERSON in the same year disraeli published a novel , henrietta temple , which was a love story and social comedy , drawing on his affair with henrietta sykes .
1383maternalism1CONCEPT loyalty * maternalism *
1384commitment1COMMITMENT disraeli impressed murray with his energy and commitment to the project , but he failed in his key task of persuading the eminent writer john gibson lockhart to edit the paper .
1385pope1PERSON he was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the church of england over to the pope .
1386entry1PERSON paul smith , in his journal article on disraeli 's politics , argues that disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the british political pantheon . "
1387sunak documents1UNKNOWN sunak documents * sybil , or the two nations *
1388archbishops1PERSON act 1874 which allowed the archbishops to go to court to stop the ritualists .
1389anything adverse1UNKNOWN indeed , he had objected to murray about croker 's inserting " high tory " sentiment : disraeli remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of reform can issue from my pen . "
1390william ewart gladstone chancellor1PERSON in office 1 december 1868 - 17 february 1874 monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by william ewart gladstone chancellor of the exchequer
1391february monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone1PERSON
1392chile1PLACE canada * chile * china + hong kong *
1393wake1PLACE in the wake of the poor election results , derby predicted to disraeli that neither of them would ever hold office again .
1394waters1WATER " i determined when descending those magical waters that i would not be a lawyer . "
1395husband1PERSON in this , he came into disagreement with the queen , who out of loyalty to her late husband albert preferred broad church teachings .
1396railway laws1PERSON amendments to the school law , the scottish legal system , and the railway laws were passed .
1397novelist1PERSON the critic robert o' kell , concurring , writes , " it is after all , even if you are a tory of the staunchest blue , impossible to make disraeli into a first-rate novelist .
1398eastern mediterranean1UNKNOWN the fall of plevna was a major story for weeks , and disraeli 's warnings that russia was a threat to british interests in the eastern mediterranean were deemed prophetic .
1399chiangism1CONCEPT chiangism * erdoğanism * francoism *
1400patriarchy1PERSON patriarchy + patriarchalism *
1401exchequer first derby government main article1ARTICLE chancellor of the exchequer first derby government main article : who ?
1402number1NUMBER a small number of radicals , generally from northern constituencies , were the strongest advocates of continuing reform .
1403british government1GOVERNMENT at the urging of george canning the british government recognised the new independent governments of argentina ( 1824 ) , colombia and mexico ( both 1825 ) .
1404silence1PERSON public support for disraeli was shown by cheering at a thanksgiving service in 1872 on the recovery of the prince of wales from illness , while gladstone was met with silence .
1405antagonists1PERSON roland quinault , however , cautions not to exaggerate the confrontation : they were not direct antagonists for most of their political careers .
1406thousands1UNKNOWN the suez canal , opened in 1869 , cut weeks and thousands of miles off the sea journey between britain and india ; in 1875 , approximately 80 % of the ships using the canal were british .
1407james brydges willyams1PERSON the disraeli vault also contains the body of sarah brydges willyams , the wife of james brydges willyams of st mawgan .
1408rhine valley1PERSON disraeli toured belgium and the rhine valley with his father in the summer of 1824 .
1409clericalism1CONCEPT black conservatism + us * catholic social teaching * clericalism *
1410parliaments1ACT parliaments were then for a seven-year term , and it was the custom not to go to the country until the sixth year unless forced to by events .
1411achievement1ACT disraeli 's novels are his main literary achievement .
1412lord randolph1PERSON welfare state people * disraeli * burke * churchill ( lord randolph ) * churchill ( winston ) *
1413short1PERMISSION the tour was cut short suddenly by meredith 's death from smallpox in cairo in july 1831 .
1414pillow1QUANTITY gladstone called several times to enquire about his rival 's condition , and wrote in his diary , " may the almighty be near his pillow . "
1415free traders1PERSON the first months of 1846 were dominated by a battle in parliament between the free traders and the protectionists over the repeal of the corn laws , with the latter rallying around disraeli and lord george bentinck .
1416discussions1EVENT amid british preparations for war , the russians and turks agreed to discussions at berlin .
1417december bloomsbury1UNKNOWN
1418melbourne ministry1INSTITUTION the jingoistic attitude of many britons increased disraeli 's political support , and the queen showed her favour by visiting him at hughenden — the first time she had visited the country home of her prime minister since the melbourne ministry .
1419suez portrait1PERSON suez portrait of disraeli published in 1873 refer to caption new crowns for old depicts disraeli as abanazar from the pantomime aladdin , offering victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one .
1420weather1NUMBER conservative chances of re-election were damaged by the poor weather , and consequent effects on agriculture .
1421lord curzon1PERSON a later foreign secretary , lord curzon , described the canal in 1909 as " the determining influence of every considerable movement of british power to the east and south of the mediterranean " .
1422almighty1UNKNOWN gladstone called several times to enquire about his rival 's condition , and wrote in his diary , " may the almighty be near his pillow . "
1423reign1PLACE in the years after disraeli 's death , as salisbury began his reign of more than twenty years over the conservatives , the party emphasised the late leader 's " one nation " views , that the conservatives at root shared the beliefs of the working classes , with the liberals the party of the urban élite .
1424d'israeli1PERSON isaac d'israeli had never taken religion very seriously but had remained a conforming member of the synagogue .
1425quickness1STATE disraeli 's courage , quickness of wit , capacity for affection , and freedom from sordid motives earned him his position .
1426easter1PERSON disraeli had customarily taken the sacrament at easter ; when this day was observed on 17 april , there was discussion among his friends and family if he should be given the opportunity , but those against , fearing that he would lose hope , prevailed .
1427ripon1PERSON as he had in government posts , disraeli rewarded old friends with clerical positions , making sydney turner , son of a good friend of isaac d' israeli , dean of ripon .
1428arliss1PERSON in 1929 , actor george arliss won the oscar for personifying disraeli 's " paternalistic , kindly , homely statesmanship " .
1429fields1BALL disraeli made various statements about his elevation , writing to selina , lady bradford on 8 august 1876 , " i am quite tired of that place " but when asked by a friend how he liked the lords , replied , " i am dead ; dead but in the elysian fields . "
1430john bright1PERSON although disraeli forged a personal friendship with john bright , a leading radical , disraeli was unable to persuade bright to sacrifice his distinct position for parliamentary advancement .
1431party leader sir robert peel1PERSON he was a loyal supporter of the party leader sir robert peel and his policies , with the exception of a personal sympathy for the chartist movement that most tories did not share .
1432protocol1SET protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
1433policy disraeli1PERSON foreign policy disraeli always considered foreign affairs to be the most critical and interesting part of statesmanship .
1434rebels1PERSON the following january , sultan abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by hungarian statesman julius andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in serbia and bulgaria .
1435sexuality1EMOTION the critic william kuhn suggests that disraeli 's fiction can be read as " the memoirs he never wrote " , revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard to what kuhn sees as the author 's " ambiguous sexuality " .
1436traditionalist catholicism1PROPERTY theravada buddhism * traditionalist catholicism + integralism + ultramontanism * traditionalist school personal variants *
1437families1INSTANCE there had been members of parliament ( mps ) from jewish families since sampson gideon in 1770 .
1438discharge1AMOUNT derby knew that his " attacks of illness would , at no distant period , incapacitate me from the discharge of my public duties " ; doctors had warned him that his health required his resignation .
1439germany1PLACE france * germany * greece * guatemala *
1440lord titchfield1PERSON the negotiations were complicated by bentinck 's sudden death on 21 september 1848 , but disraeli obtained a loan of £25,000 from bentinck 's brothers lord henry bentinck and lord titchfield .
1441moment1PERIOD the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
1442panama1PLACE mexico * netherlands * new zealand * norway * pakistan * panama * peru * poland *
1443tomb1PERSON a death mask resembling disraeli disraeli 's death mask a grave disraeli 's tomb at hughenden returning to hughenden , disraeli brooded over his electoral dismissal , but also resumed work on endymion , which he had begun in 1872 and laid aside before the 1874 election .
1444peelite earl1PERSON he was replaced by the peelite earl of aberdeen , with gladstone as his chancellor .
1445analyst1PERSON the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
1446belize1PLACE belgium * belize * brazil *
1447whig ministry1INSTITUTION palmerston was deemed essential to any whig ministry , and he would not join any he did not head .
1448malaysia1PLACE luxembourg * malaysia *
1449belloc1PERSON nordau * belloc * iorga * chesterton *
1450rituals1UNKNOWN he was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the church of england over to the pope .
1451financier j. d1UNKNOWN he became involved with the financier j. d . powles , who was prominent among those encouraging the mining boom .
1452anything1ANYTHING indeed , he had objected to murray about croker 's inserting " high tory " sentiment : disraeli remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of reform can issue from my pen . "
1453repetition1ACT derby was reluctant to seek to unseat the government , fearing a repetition of the who ?
1454agrarianism1CONCEPT south korea * taiwan * turkey * ukraine * united kingdom * united states related ideologies * agrarianism *
1455tory policies1PERSON it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
1456industrialists1PERSON disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
1457civil service1INSTITUTION civil service disraeli 's failure to appoint samuel wilberforce as bishop of london may have cost him votes in the 1868 election .
1458recruits1UNKNOWN it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
1459satires1DEVICE the following year he wrote a series of satires on politicians of the day , which he published in the times under the pen-name " runnymede " .
1460more1PLACE he was close to his sister and on affectionate but more distant terms with his surviving brothers .
1461richard assheton cross1PERSON under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
1462horrors1STATE he sent a copy to disraeli , who called it " vindictive and ill-written ... of all the bulgarian horrors perhaps the greatest " .
1463aldous1PERSON when disraeli returned as prime minister in 1874 and went to kiss hands , he did so literally , on one knee ; according to richard aldous in his book on the rivalry between disraeli and gladstone , " victoria and disraeli would exploit their closeness for mutual advantage . "
1464spengler1PERSON spengler * jabotinsky *
1465wars1EVENT controversial wars in afghanistan and south africa undermined his public support .
1466podium statue1PERSON a statue on a podium statue of disraeli in parliament square , london disraeli is buried with his wife in a vault beneath the church of st michael and all angels which stands in the grounds of his home , hughenden manor .
1467recommendation1SUGGESTION on the recommendation of the carlton club , disraeli was adopted as a tory parliamentary candidate at the ensuing general election .
1468housing1ACQUISITION under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
1469message1SPEECH ACT disraeli declined a visit from the queen , saying , " she would only ask me to take a message to albert . "
1470inextinguishable1UNKNOWN disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
1471robert o' kell1PERSON the critic robert o' kell , concurring , writes , " it is after all , even if you are a tory of the staunchest blue , impossible to make disraeli into a first-rate novelist .
1472fun1PERSON he wrote to lady bradford that it was just as much work to end a government as to form one , without any of the fun .
1473energy1ENERGY disraeli impressed murray with his energy and commitment to the project , but he failed in his key task of persuading the eminent writer john gibson lockhart to edit the paper .
1474brothers lord henry bentinck1PERSON the negotiations were complicated by bentinck 's sudden death on 21 september 1848 , but disraeli obtained a loan of £25,000 from bentinck 's brothers lord henry bentinck and lord titchfield .
1475lord rowton1PERSON his literary executor was his private secretary , lord rowton .
1476george1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by william ewart gladstone succeeded by george ward hunt
1477stature1PERSON she also saw an imperial title as proclaiming britain 's increased stature in the world .
1478count alarcos1PERSON the tragedy of count alarcos ( 1839 ) non-fiction * an inquiry into the plans , progress , and policy of the american mining companies ( 1825 ) * lawyers and legislators : or , notes , on the american mining companies ( 1825 ) *
1479april monarch victoria1PERSON
1480linger1PERSON five days before the end of the 1876 session of parliament , on 11 august , disraeli was seen to linger and look around the chamber before departing .
1481annals1UNKNOWN there were tory dissenters , most notably lord cranborne ( as robert cecil was by then known ) who resigned from the government and spoke against the bill , accusing disraeli of " a political betrayal which has no parallel in our parliamentary annals " .
1482pasco1PLACE pasco played disraeli in the itv series number 10 in 1983 .
1483world war1EVENT he articulated an imperial role for britain that would last into world war ii and brought an intermittently self-isolated britain into the concert of europe .
1484birmingham1PLACE palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
1485provinces1ENTITY in july 1875 serb populations in bosnia and herzegovina , then provinces of the ottoman empire , revolted against the turks , alleging religious persecution and poor administration .
1486publisher john murray1PERSON he had made a tentative start : in may 1824 he submitted a manuscript to his father 's friend , the publisher john murray , but withdrew it before murray could decide whether to publish it .
1487british music hall patrons1PERSON historian michael diamond asserts that for british music hall patrons in the 1880s and 1890s , " xenophobia and pride in empire " were reflected in the halls ' most popular political heroes : all were conservatives and disraeli stood out above all , even decades after his death , while gladstone was used as a villain .
1488oxford1INSTITUTION in june 1853 disraeli was awarded an honorary degree by the university of oxford .
1489risk1STATEMENT derby had either to take office or risk damage to his reputation , and he accepted the queen 's commission as prime minister .
1490hong kong1PERSON canada * chile * china + hong kong *
1491unification1TERM it reflected anti-catholicism of the sort that was popular in britain , and which fueled support for italian unification ( " risorgimento " ) .
1492andrew roberts1PERSON salisbury ignored these instructions , which his biographer , andrew roberts deemed " ludicrous " .
1493profligate1PERSON one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
1494urging1UNKNOWN at the urging of george canning the british government recognised the new independent governments of argentina ( 1824 ) , colombia and mexico ( both 1825 ) .
1495representation1ACT it eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as liverpool and manchester .
1496articles1ARTICLE first term main articles :
1497poet1PERSON in some of his early fiction disraeli also portrayed himself and what he felt to be his byronic dual nature : the poet and the man of action .
1498grief1CONDITION queen victoria was prostrated with grief , and considered ennobling ralph or coningsby as a memorial to disraeli ( without children , his titles became extinct with his death ) , but decided against it on the ground that their means were too small for a peerage .
1499refrain1EVENT my father 's refrain always was ' philip carteret webb ' , who was the most eminent solicitor of his boyhood and who was an mp .
1500competition1EVENT the corn laws imposed a tariff on imported wheat , protecting british farmers from foreign competition , but making the cost of bread artificially high .
1501works part1PART
1502labourers1UNKNOWN under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
1503lieutenant1PERSON continued ill health during his second premiership caused him to contemplate resignation , but his lieutenant , derby , was unwilling , feeling that he could not manage the queen .
1504fierce opponent1PERSON a young man with dark hair and huge sideburns lord robert cecil , disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli led a toothless opposition in the commons—seeing no way of unseating palmerston , derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
1505episodes1EVENT because of his asthma and gout , disraeli went out as little as possible , fearing more serious episodes of illness .
1506borough franchises1PERMISSION a stately-looking gentleman in a dark suit , sitting with a book the earl of derby , prime minister 1852 , 1858-59 , 1866-68 in march 1851 , lord john russell 's government was defeated over a bill to equalise the county and borough franchises , mostly because of divisions among his supporters .
1507portrayals1RESULT stage and screen actor george arliss was known for his portrayals of disraeli , winning the academy award for best actor for 1929 's disraeli .
1508absence1ABSENCE in the absence of a credible party rival and for fear of having an election called on the issue , conservatives felt obliged to support disraeli despite their misgivings .
1509state people1HUMAN GROUP welfare state people * disraeli * burke * churchill ( lord randolph ) * churchill ( winston ) *
1510oligarchy1PERSON one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
1511society novel1EVENT the trip was financed partly by another high society novel , the young duke , written in 1829-30 .
1512t f maples1PERSON t f maples was not only the young disraeli 's employer and a friend of his father , but also his prospective father-in-law : isaac and maples considered that the latter 's only daughter might be a suitable match for benjamin .
1513profound implications1PERSON the split in the tory party over the repeal of the corn laws had profound implications for disraeli 's political career : almost every
1514executors1PERSON despite having been offered a state funeral by queen victoria , disraeli 's executors decided against a public procession and funeral , fearing that too large crowds would gather to do him honour .
1515colleagues1PERSON reassured , he wrote to the queen , resigning and recommending disraeli as " only he could command the cordial support , en masse , of his present colleagues " .
1516encouragement disraeli1PERSON with lyndhurst 's encouragement disraeli turned to writing propaganda for his newly adopted party .
1517succession1SUCCESSION he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
1518chancel1SPACE there is also a memorial to him in the chancel in the church , erected in his honour by queen victoria .
1519drama1STATE drama *
1520gaulle1UNKNOWN de gaulle * dollfuss *
1521self portrait1PERSON
1522editions disraeli1PERSON
1523portrayal1RESULT disraeli as a young man—a retrospective portrayal painted in 1852
1524flag united kingdom portal1PERSON one nation conservatives caucus * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * flag united kingdom portal * v * t * e portrait of benjamin disraeli by john everett millais , 1881
1525municipalities1EVENT it eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as liverpool and manchester .
1526sacrament1CAUSE disraeli had customarily taken the sacrament at easter ; when this day was observed on 17 april , there was discussion among his friends and family if he should be given the opportunity , but those against , fearing that he would lose hope , prevailed .
1527greasy pole1PERSON the new prime minister told those who came to congratulate him , " i have climbed to the top of the greasy pole . "
1528ashkenazi1PERSON he also had some ashkenazi jewish ancestors .
1529bomb1BOMB palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
1530ordoliberalism1CONCEPT ordoliberalism related topics * anti-communism + white terror *
1531thorold dickinson1PERSON john gielgud portrayed disraeli in 1941 , in thorold dickinson 's morale-boosting film the prime minister , which followed the politician from the age of 30 to that of 70 .
1532map1UNKNOWN a map .
1533soldiers1GROUP on 8 september 1879 sir louis cavagnari , in charge of the mission in kabul , was killed with his entire staff by rebelling afghan soldiers .
1534public worship regulation1PERSON he consequently was a strong supporter of the public worship regulation
1535ingredients1TENDENCY the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
1536clerkship1EVENT the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
1537island1PLACE nevertheless , the cyprus convention ceding the island to britain was announced during the congress , and again made disraeli a sensation .
1538dominance1PERSON the public saw the venture as a daring statement of british dominance of the seas .
1539scruples1ACT he recalled : i had some scruples , for even then i dreamed of parliament .
1540disarray1DEFICIENCY political plans were thrown into disarray by palmerston 's death on 18 october 1865 .
1541gentleman1PERSON a stately-looking gentleman in a dark suit , sitting with a book the earl of derby , prime minister 1852 , 1858-59 , 1866-68 in march 1851 , lord john russell 's government was defeated over a bill to equalise the county and borough franchises , mostly because of divisions among his supporters .
1542matthew arnold1PERSON he told matthew arnold , " everybody likes flattery ; and , when you come to royalty , you should lay it on with a trowel " .
1543poets1UNKNOWN dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
1544governing role1ROLE when a rebellion broke out in india in 1857 , disraeli took a keen interest , having been a member of a select committee in 1852 which considered how best to rule the subcontinent , and had proposed eliminating the governing role of the british east india company .
1545gaullism1CONCEPT fujimorism * gaullism * janismo * kaczyzm *
1546approach1OPPORTUNITY some historians have commented on a romantic impulse behind disraeli 's approach to empire and foreign affairs :
1547train1TRAIN by one account , when met with russian intransigence , disraeli told his secretary to order a special train to return them home to begin the war .
1548decay1PROCESS disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
1549title page1DOCUMENT the cover of a book , entitled " sybil ; or , the two nations " title page of first edition of sybil ( 1845 )
1550winchester1PLACE it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
1551secure1UNKNOWN the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
1552felony1PERSON at the request of the french ambassador , palmerston proposed amending the conspiracy to murder statute to make creating an infernal device a felony .
1553film mrs brown1PERSON in the 1997 film mrs brown , disraeli was played by antony sher .
1554antisemitism1CONCEPT he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
1555exchange1RESULT released from the law , disraeli did some work for murray , but turned most of his attention to speculative dealing on the stock exchange .
1556tolls1INSTANCE the canal was losing money , and an attempt by ferdinand de lesseps , builder of the canal , to raise the tolls had fallen through when the khedive had threatened military force to prevent it , and had also attracted disraeli 's attention .
1557rapport1RELATIONSHIP the memory of disraeli was used by the conservatives to appeal to the working classes , with whom he was said to have had a rapport .
1558swain1PERSON in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
1559returns1STATEMENT once returns began to be announced , it became clear that the conservatives were decisively beaten .
1560remarks1ACT he adds , " before the 1990s...few biographers of disraeli or historians of victorian politics acknowledged the prominence of the antisemitism that accompanied his climb up the greasy pole or its role in shaping his own singular sense of jewishness . " according to michael ragussis : what began in the 1830s as scattered anti-semitic remarks aimed at him by the crowds in his early electioneering became in the 1870s a kind of national scrutiny of his jewishness — a scrutiny that erupted into a kind of anti-semitic attack led by some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians of the time and anchored in the charge that disraeli was a crypto-jew .
1561calling1PERSON first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
1562best seller1PERSON
1563taxes1UNKNOWN his proposed budget , which he presented to the commons on 3 december , lowered the taxes on malt and tea , provisions designed to appeal to the working class .
1564property rights1UNKNOWN property rights * public morality *
1565paul smith1PERSON paul smith , in his journal article on disraeli 's politics , argues that disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the british political pantheon . "
1566horthy1PLACE baldwin * maurras * horthy *
1567conspirators1PERSON among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
1568world power1POWER with coningsby ; or , the new generation ( 1844 ) , disraeli , in blake 's view , " infused the novel genre with political sensibility , espousing the belief that england 's future as a world power depended not on the complacent old guard , but on youthful , idealistic politicians . " sybil ; or , the two nations was less idealistic than coningsby ; the " two nations " of its sub-title referred to the huge economic and social gap between the privileged few and the deprived working classes .
1569offer1OFFER on his advice , gladstone accepted the offer in january 1879 , and later that year began his midlothian campaign , speaking not only in edinburgh , but across britain , attacking disraeli , to huge crowds .
1570gathorne gathorne hardy1PERSON
1571netanyahu1PERSON kaczyński * netanyahu * modi * putin * abe * bolsonaro * orbán * meloni religion *
1572living1PERSON he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
1573film hero1PERSON steven fielding has argued that disraeli was an especially popular film hero : " historical dramas favoured disraeli over gladstone and , more substantively , promulgated an essentially deferential view of democratic leadership . "
1574mayfair1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
1575books1ENTITY he wrote regular reports on proceedings in the commons to victoria , who described them as " very curious " and " much in the style of his books " .
1576fascism1EVENT clerical fascism * communitarianism *
1577new1PLACE disraeli 's sister and brothers adopted the new version of the name ;
1578society1INSTITUTION disraeli , then just 23 , did not move in high society , as the numerous solecisms in his book made obvious .
1579princely revenue1MONEY disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
1580irish home rule league1PERSON overall , they won 350 seats to 245 for the liberals and 57 for the irish home rule league .
1581paternalism1TREATMENT muscular liberalism * noblesse oblige * paternalism * pragmatism *
1582bench1ENTITY opposition and third term as chancellor main article : third derby-disraeli ministry after derby 's second ejection from office , disraeli faced dissension within conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister warned disraeli of some mps seeking his removal from the front bench .
1583fundamentalism1PERSON family values * fundamentalism *
1584buckinghamshire constituency1PLACE in the 1847 general election , disraeli stood , successfully , for the buckinghamshire constituency .
1585howard1PERSON baldwin * macmillan * butler * howard *
1586interpretation1EVENT the imperialism of his later years was equally superficial : an interpretation of politics without economics .
1587clothes clockwise1PERSON first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
1588de lesseps1PLACE the canal was losing money , and an attempt by ferdinand de lesseps , builder of the canal , to raise the tolls had fallen through when the khedive had threatened military force to prevent it , and had also attracted disraeli 's attention .
1589derby disraeli ministry derby1PERSON
1590jews relief act1ACT however , until the jews relief act 1858 , mps were required to take the oath of allegiance " on the true faith of a christian " , necessitating at least nominal conversion .
1591zululand main articles1ARTICLE afghanistan to zululand main articles : second anglo-afghan war and anglo-zulu war
1592cyprus convention1PLACE nevertheless , the cyprus convention ceding the island to britain was announced during the congress , and again made disraeli a sensation .
1593office july1PERIOD
1594edinburgh1PLACE on his advice , gladstone accepted the offer in january 1879 , and later that year began his midlothian campaign , speaking not only in edinburgh , but across britain , attacking disraeli , to huge crowds .
1595invasions1GROUP as successful invasions of india generally came through afghanistan , the british had observed and sometimes intervened there since the 1830s , hoping to keep the russians out .
1596reshuffle1INSTANCE gladstone 's government struggled on , beset by scandal and unimproved by a reshuffle .
1597sanitation1PLACE according to one study , " better sanitation was enforced throughout scotland . "
1598dugin1UNKNOWN hoppe * dugin * peterson politicians *
1599reading1PROPERTY he was defeated by 19 votes on the second reading , with many liberals crossing the aisle against him .
1600stock1PERSON released from the law , disraeli did some work for murray , but turned most of his attention to speculative dealing on the stock exchange .
1601criticism1ACT disraeli 's biographer jonathan parry writes that the financial failure and personal criticism that disraeli suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger for a serious nervous crisis affecting him over the next four years : " he had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . "
1602factory act1ACT disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
1603traders1PERSON the first months of 1846 were dominated by a battle in parliament between the free traders and the protectionists over the repeal of the corn laws , with the latter rallying around disraeli and lord george bentinck .
1604entirety1UNKNOWN he rejected the concept in its entirety . "
1605mistakes1EVENT disraeli circa 1870 given gladstone 's majority in the commons , disraeli could do little but protest as the government advanced legislation ; he chose to await liberal mistakes .
1606francoism1CONCEPT chiangism * erdoğanism * francoism *
1607overall1GARMENT disraeli 's overall purpose was to enact policies which would benefit the working classes , making his party more attractive to them .
1608retirement1ACT upon derby 's retirement in 1868 , disraeli became prime minister briefly before losing that year 's general election .
1609few1UNKNOWN at that time , british politics were dominated by the aristocracy , with a few powerful commoners .
1610cases1STUDY the whigs derived from the coalition of lords who had forced through the bill of rights 1689 and in some cases were their descendants .
1611transvaal1UNKNOWN british policy in south africa was to encourage federation between the british-run cape colony and natal , and the boer republics , the transvaal ( annexed by britain in 1877 ) and the orange free state .
1612radziwill palace1PERSON the treaty of berlin was signed on 13 july 1878 at the radziwill palace in berlin .
1613mores1SET norms + customs + mores * ordered liberty *
1614solecisms1CONCEPT disraeli , then just 23 , did not move in high society , as the numerous solecisms in his book made obvious .
1615maurrassisme1UNKNOWN maurrassisme * mellismo * metaxism *
1616kuehnelt leddihn1UNKNOWN
1617curzon street1PLACE disraeli 's last confirmed words before dying at his home at 19 curzon street in the early morning of 19 april were " i had rather live but i am not afraid to die " .
1618spouse mary anne evans ​ ​1PERSON spouse mary anne evans ​ ​ ( m. 1839 ; died 1872 ) ​ parents *
1619picture1PICTURE the interruptions were fewer , as gladstone gained control of the house , and in the next two hours painted a picture of disraeli as frivolous and his budget as subversive .
1620writer r. w. stewart1PERSON the writer r. w. stewart observed that there have always been two criteria for judging disraeli 's novels— political and artistic .
1621qutb1UNKNOWN qutb * kuehnelt-leddihn *
1622spells1LANGUAGE he was backed by his party , hungry for office and its emoluments after almost thirty years with only brief spells in government .
1623gorst1PERSON disraeli had supported the efforts of party manager john eldon gorst to put the administration of the conservative party on a modern basis .
1624notice1AMOUNT disraeli was highly gratified by the dispute , which propelled him to general public notice for the first time .
1625ziaism national variants1ABILITY sarkozysm * thatcherism * trumpism * ziaism national variants *
1626schooling1PROCESS details of his schooling are sketchy .
1627buccleuch1UNKNOWN the small scottish electorate was dominated by two noblemen , the conservative duke of buccleuch and the liberal earl of rosebery .
1628accent1PROCESS by one account , the british ambassador in berlin , lord odo russell , hoping to spare the delegates disraeli 's very poor french accent , told disraeli that the congress was hoping to hear a speech in english by one of its masters .
1629sir charles wood1WOOD the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
1630lord melbourne1PERSON by the time of his second premiership , disraeli had built a strong relationship with victoria , probably closer to her than any of her prime ministers except her first , lord melbourne .
1631recess1ACT the whigs were wracked by internal dissensions during the second half of 1851 , much of which parliament spent in recess .
1632widow1PERSON a portrait of a young woman with elaborately styled brown hair , tied up with a blue bow mary anne lewis c. 1820-30 in 1839 disraeli married mary anne lewis , the widow of wyndham lewis .
1633trowel1TOOL he told matthew arnold , " everybody likes flattery ; and , when you come to royalty , you should lay it on with a trowel " .
1634foundation1SUBSTANCE he had far-reaching schemes but little administrative ability , and there was some foundation for napoleon
1635realities1PERSON in parry 's view , disraeli 's foreign policy " can be seen as a gigantic castle in the air ( as it was by gladstone ) , or as an overdue attempt to force the british commercial classes to awaken to the realities of european politics . "
1636self interest1ELEMENT
1637papacy1EVENT one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
1638statesmen1PERSON this diplomatic victory established disraeli as one of europe 's leading statesmen .
1639picketing1PERSON disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
1640harmony1PERSON the films created " a facsimile world where existing values were invariably validated by events in the film and where all discord could be turned into harmony by an acceptance of the status quo " .
1641confrontation1ACT roland quinault , however , cautions not to exaggerate the confrontation : they were not direct antagonists for most of their political careers .
1642institutions1INSTITUTION social institutions *
1643approval1ABSTRACT ENTITY to roaring approval , he compared the liberal front bench to " a range of exhausted volcanoes...
1644everybody1UNKNOWN he told matthew arnold , " everybody likes flattery ; and , when you come to royalty , you should lay it on with a trowel " .
1645videos video1NUMBER external videos video icon booknotes interview with stanley weintraub on disraeli : a biography , february 6 , 1994 , c-span stanley weintraub , in his biography of disraeli , points out that his subject did much to advance britain towards the 20th century , carrying one of the two great reform acts of the 19th despite the opposition of his liberal rival , gladstone .
1646influx1ACT peel hoped that the repeal of the corn laws and the resultant influx of cheaper wheat into britain would relieve the condition of the poor , and in particular the great famine caused by successive failure of potato crops in ireland .
1647emoluments1INSTANCE he was backed by his party , hungry for office and its emoluments after almost thirty years with only brief spells in government .
1648victorian britain1PERSON disraeli 's literary and political career interacted over his lifetime and fascinated victorian britain , making him " one of the most eminent figures in victorian public life " , and occasioned a large output of commentary .
1649eminence1PERSON dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
1650discussion1EVENT disraeli had customarily taken the sacrament at easter ; when this day was observed on 17 april , there was discussion among his friends and family if he should be given the opportunity , but those against , fearing that he would lose hope , prevailed .
1651disraeli government1GOVERNMENT in its short life , the first disraeli government passed noncontroversial laws .
1652caricature1PERSON disraeli left an unfinished novel in which the priggish central character , falconet , is unmistakably a caricature of gladstone .
1653st michael1PLACE a statue on a podium statue of disraeli in parliament square , london disraeli is buried with his wife in a vault beneath the church of st michael and all angels which stands in the grounds of his home , hughenden manor .
1654jude1PERSON in berlin , word spread of bismarck 's admiring description of disraeli , " der alte jude , das ist der mann !
1655june william iv1PERSON
1656employer1PERSON t f maples was not only the young disraeli 's employer and a friend of his father , but also his prospective father-in-law : isaac and maples considered that the latter 's only daughter might be a suitable match for benjamin .
1657labour party meetings1ACTIVITY even workers attending labour party meetings deferred to leaders with an elevated social background who showed they cared . "
1658sarah bradford1PERSON sarah bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " .
1659general election1POWER upon derby 's retirement in 1868 , disraeli became prime minister briefly before losing that year 's general election .
1660idonisian eclogue1UNKNOWN too much so ; in the pride of boyish erudition , i edited the idonisian eclogue of theocritus , wh . was privately printed .
1661poland1PLACE mexico * netherlands * new zealand * norway * pakistan * panama * peru * poland *
1662margin1GROUP despite rumours about palmerston 's health as he turned 80 , he remained personally popular , and the liberals increased their margin in the july 1865 general election .
1663conservative duke1PERSON the small scottish electorate was dominated by two noblemen , the conservative duke of buccleuch and the liberal earl of rosebery .
1664young england1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
1665patriarchalism1CONCEPT patriarchy + patriarchalism *
1666green1PERSON corporatist * cultural * fiscal * green *
1667david butler1PERSON ian mcshane starred in the four-part 1978 atv miniseries disraeli : portrait of a romantic , written by david butler .
1668legacy1PERSON at her death in 1865 , she left him a large legacy , which helped clear his debts .
1669pains1CONDITION over time , her dislike softened , especially as disraeli took pains to cultivate her .
1670admiration1EVENT from the liberal benches too there was admiration .
1671portraits1IMAGE three portraits ; a man and two women disraeli 's father , mother and sister —
1672name beaconsfield1PLACE the name beaconsfield , a town near hughenden , was given to a minor character in vivian grey .
1673election results1RESULT in the wake of the poor election results , derby predicted to disraeli that neither of them would ever hold office again .
1674tory schism1PERSON the new house of commons had more conservative than whig members , but the depth of the tory schism enabled russell to continue to govern .
1675leader in waiting1AMOUNT
1676dictatorship1EVENT right-wing politics + alt + authoritarianism + centre + dictatorship + far + new * small-c conservative * toryism * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * v * t * e novels * vivian grey ( 1826 , revised 1853 ) *
1677inquiry1ACT the tragedy of count alarcos ( 1839 ) non-fiction * an inquiry into the plans , progress , and policy of the american mining companies ( 1825 ) * lawyers and legislators : or , notes , on the american mining companies ( 1825 ) *
1678mary anne disraeli1PERSON in addition to the viscounty bestowed on mary anne disraeli , the earldom of beaconsfield was to have been bestowed on edmund burke in 1797 , but he had died before receiving it .
1679relations1RELATION even then their personal relations remained fairly cordial until their dispute over the eastern question in the later 1870s .
1680woman1PERSON a portrait of a young woman with elaborately styled brown hair , tied up with a blue bow mary anne lewis c. 1820-30 in 1839 disraeli married mary anne lewis , the widow of wyndham lewis .
1681sub title1ACTION
1682mourners1PERSON the chief mourners at the service at hughenden on 26
1683day boy1PERSON from the age of about six he was a day boy at a dame school in islington , which one of his biographers described as " for those days a very high-class establishment " .
1684foot fight1PERSON balkans and bulgaria cavalry wielding sabres fight men with guns on foot fight in
1685exchanges1RESULT disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
1686morality1EVENT property rights * public morality *
1687pinochet1PERSON pinochet * marcos * park * smith *
1688south american1PLACE there was at the time a boom in shares in south american mining companies .
1689independent governments1GOVERNMENT at the urging of george canning the british government recognised the new independent governments of argentina ( 1824 ) , colombia and mexico ( both 1825 ) .
1690chartism1CONCEPT disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
1691surname1PORTION the year after joining maples ' firm , benjamin changed his surname from d' israeli to disraeli .
1692attempts1ACTION after several unsuccessful attempts , disraeli entered the house of commons in 1837 .
1693liverpool1PLACE it eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as liverpool and manchester .
1694hope1EVENT there , he told the gathered crowd , " lord salisbury and i have brought you back peace— but a peace i hope with honour . "
1695lord roberts1PERSON under lord roberts , the british easily defeated them and installed a new ruler , leaving a mission and garrison in kabul .
1696fess sable1PERSON per saltire gules and argent a castle triple-towered in chief argent two lions rampant in fess sable and an eagle displayed in base or .
1697road1PLACE king 's road , bedford row , bloomsbury , london , the second child and eldest son of isaac d' israeli , a literary critic and historian , and maria ( miriam ) , née basevi .
1698john wilson croker1PERSON whig pamphlet edited by john wilson croker and published by murray entitled england and france : or a cure for ministerial gallomania .
1699shrewsbury1PLACE finding the financial demands of his maidstone seat too much , disraeli secured a tory nomination for shrewsbury , winning one of the constituency 's two seats at the 1841 general election , despite serious opposition , and heavy debts which opponents seized on .
1700depiction1ABSTRACT ENTITY a depiction of the battle of kandahar , fought in 1880 .
1701converts1ABSTRACT ENTITY herbert predicted that the budget would fail because " jews make no converts " .
1702socialism1GROUP conservative feminism * conservative socialism * conservative wave *
1703argues1UNKNOWN historians differ on disraeli 's motives for rewriting his family history : bernard glassman argues that it was intended to give him status comparable to that of england 's ruling elite ;
1704gravity1PERSON despite the gravity of disraeli 's condition , the doctors concocted optimistic bulletins for public consumption .
1705jem1PERSON isaac , maria and sarah disraeli 's siblings were sarah , naphtali ( born and died 1807 ) , ralph and james ( " jem " ) .
1706identity1PERSON collective identity *
1707everything1ACTIVITY the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
1708output1ARTIFACT disraeli 's literary and political career interacted over his lifetime and fascinated victorian britain , making him " one of the most eminent figures in victorian public life " , and occasioned a large output of commentary .
1709dissension1CONDITION opposition and third term as chancellor main article : third derby-disraeli ministry after derby 's second ejection from office , disraeli faced dissension within conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister warned disraeli of some mps seeking his removal from the front bench .
1710lord granby1PERSON in the aftermath of the debate bentinck resigned the leadership and was succeeded by lord granby ; disraeli 's speech , thought by many of his own party to be blasphemous , ruled him out for the time being .
1711june disraeli1PERSON
1712comments1EVENT walsh comments on disraeli 's multifaceted public life :
1713disagreement1EVENT in this , he came into disagreement with the queen , who out of loyalty to her late husband albert preferred broad church teachings .
1714black conservatism1ATTITUDE black conservatism + us * catholic social teaching * clericalism *
1715affiliations young england1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
1716cameronism1CONCEPT berlusconism * bukelism * cameronism *
1717wall1RESOURCE in later years , the german chancellor would show visitors to his office three pictures on the wall : " the portrait of my sovereign , there on the right that of my wife , and on the left , there , that of lord beaconsfield " .
1718handling1AMOUNT the party truce ended in 1864 , with tories outraged over palmerston 's handling of the territorial dispute between the german confederation and denmark known as the schleswig-holstein question .
1719home secretary1PERSON under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
1720tutor1INSTITUTION after this i was with a private tutor for two years in my own county , & my education was severely classical .
1721inspectors1PERSON act instituted sanitary inspectors and medical officers .
1722leap1PERSON with what derby cautioned was " a leap in the dark " , disraeli had outflanked the liberals who , as the supposed champions of reform , dared not oppose him .
1723solicitors1PERSON on their return to england he left the solicitors , at the suggestion of maples , with the aim of qualifying as a barrister .
1724crimean war1EVENT the start of the crimean war in 1854 caused a lull in party politics ;
1725edition1ABSTRACT ENTITY the cover of a book , entitled " sybil ; or , the two nations " title page of first edition of sybil ( 1845 )
1726dr cogan1PERSON dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
1727emperor1PERSON palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
1728india secretary lord1PERSON this meant that the chief conservatives— disraeli , salisbury , and india secretary lord cranbrook— would not be heard from .
1729re telling1STATEMENT
1730halls1PERSON historian michael diamond asserts that for british music hall patrons in the 1880s and 1890s , " xenophobia and pride in empire " were reflected in the halls ' most popular political heroes : all were conservatives and disraeli stood out above all , even decades after his death , while gladstone was used as a villain .
1731western plutocrat1PLACE critic shane leslie noted three decades after his death that " disraeli 's career was a romance such as no eastern vizier or western plutocrat could tell .
1732invasion1GROUP in the event of another rebellion in india or a russian invasion , the time saved at suez might be crucial .
1733protectionist features1ARTIFACT although the budget did not contain protectionist features , the opposition was prepared to destroy it— and disraeli 's career as chancellor—in part out of revenge for his actions against peel in 1846 .
1734sideburns lord robert cecil1PERSON a young man with dark hair and huge sideburns lord robert cecil , disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli led a toothless opposition in the commons—seeing no way of unseating palmerston , derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
1735comte de chaudordy1PERSON four men international delegates at the constantinople conference : clockwise from top left , saffet pasha ( turkey ) , general ignatieff ( russia ) , lord salisbury ( britain ) and the comte de chaudordy ( france )
1736women friends1PERSON two men and two women friends and allies of disraeli in the 1830s : clockwise from top left —
1737examination1PERIOD gladstone in 1870 had sponsored an order in council , introducing competitive examination into the civil service , diminishing the political aspects of government hiring .
1738american civil war1EVENT when the american civil war began in 1861 , disraeli said little publicly , but like most englishmen expected the south to win .
1739orbán1PERSON kaczyński * netanyahu * modi * putin * abe * bolsonaro * orbán * meloni religion *
1740élite1PERSON in the years after disraeli 's death , as salisbury began his reign of more than twenty years over the conservatives , the party emphasised the late leader 's " one nation " views , that the conservatives at root shared the beliefs of the working classes , with the liberals the party of the urban élite .
1741suez canal share purchase1PLACE sir ian malcolm described the suez canal share purchase as " the greatest romance of mr . disraeli 's romantic career " .
1742sensibility1VALUE with coningsby ; or , the new generation ( 1844 ) , disraeli , in blake 's view , " infused the novel genre with political sensibility , espousing the belief that england 's future as a world power depended not on the complacent old guard , but on youthful , idealistic politicians . " sybil ; or , the two nations was less idealistic than coningsby ; the " two nations " of its sub-title referred to the huge economic and social gap between the privileged few and the deprived working classes .
1743conduct1ACT the british military efforts were marked by bungling , and in 1855 a restive parliament considered a resolution to establish a committee on the conduct of the war .
1744origin1PERSON his name shows that he is of jewish origin .
1745degree1PROCESS in june 1853 disraeli was awarded an honorary degree by the university of oxford .
1746security1FORCE in the following decades , the security of the suez canal became a major concern of british foreign policy .
1747revolutionary epick1UNKNOWN 3. tancred , or the new crusade ( 1847 ) poetry * the revolutionary epick ( 1834 )
1748farmer1PERSON in the past , the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times , but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the united states , grain prices remained low .
1749taunton constituency1PERSON he did not defeat the incumbent whig member , henry labouchere , but the taunton constituency was regarded as unwinnable by the tories .
1750new zealand1PLACE mexico * netherlands * new zealand * norway * pakistan * panama * peru * poland *
1751feet1FOOT as mps prepared to divide , gladstone rose to his feet and began an angry speech , despite the efforts of tory mps to shout him down .
1752three quarters1EVENT
1753bush1PERSON thatcher * kohl * fujimori * bush * trump *
1754scholar1PERSON dr cogan , a greek scholar of eminence , who had contributed notes to the a schylus of bishop blomfield , & was himself the editor of the greek gnostic poets .
1755royalism1CONCEPT monarchism + royalism * moral absolutism * natalism *
1756dollfuss1PLACE de gaulle * dollfuss *
1757depictions1ABSTRACT ENTITY disraeli 's early " silver fork " novels vivian grey ( 1826 ) and the young duke ( 1831 ) featured romanticised depictions of aristocratic life ( despite his ignorance of it ) with character sketches of well-known public figures lightly disguised .
1758metternich1PERSON his detachment from english prejudices did not give him any particular insight into foreign affairs ; as a young man he accepted the platitudes of metternich and failed to understand the meaning of the nationalist movements in europe .
1759le bon1PERSON taine * le bon *
1760split1PLACE in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
1761occupation1GROUP in advance of the conference , disraeli sent salisbury private word to seek british military occupation of bulgaria and bosnia , and british control of the ottoman army .
1762british politics1ACTION at that time , british politics were dominated by the aristocracy , with a few powerful commoners .
1763guns1DEVICE balkans and bulgaria cavalry wielding sabres fight men with guns on foot fight in
1764liberal amendments1EVENT even as disraeli accepted liberal amendments ( although pointedly refusing those moved by gladstone ) that further lowered the property qualification , cranborne was unable to lead an effective rebellion .
1765taine1PERSON taine * le bon *
1766display1PERSON in blake 's words , " found himself almost the only figure on his side capable of putting up the oratorical display essential for a parliamentary leader . "
1767montagu corry1PERSON among the honours he arranged before resigning as prime minister on 21 april 1880 was one for his private secretary , montagu corry , who became baron rowton .
1768information1INFORMATION role of his jewishness further information :
1769journey1PERSON the journey encouraged his self-consciousness , his moral relativism , and his interest in eastern racial and religious attitudes . "
1770squire1PERSON byronic hero , man of letters , social critic , parliamentary virtuoso , squire of hughenden , royal companion , european statesman .
1771putinism1CONCEPT powellism * pinochetism * putinism *
1772infirmities1CONDITION owing to his infirmities , disraeli was 45 minutes late for the lord mayor 's dinner at the guild hall in november , at which it is customary that the prime minister speaks .
1773past1PERIOD in the past , the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times , but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the united states , grain prices remained low .
1774half1PLACE the whigs were wracked by internal dissensions during the second half of 1851 , much of which parliament spent in recess .
1775february prime minister1HUMAN ROLE
1776sigh1PERSON gladstone , disraeli stated , dominated the scene and " alternated between a menace and a sigh " .
1777robert cecil1PERSON among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
1778erudition1ACT too much so ; in the pride of boyish erudition , i edited the idonisian eclogue of theocritus , wh . was privately printed .
1779sons1PERSON nevertheless , disraeli made fewer peers ( only 22 , including one of victoria 's sons ) than had gladstone ( 37 during his just over five years in office ) .
1780birthday1GROUP in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
1781sir robert napier1PERSON ii of ethiopia under sir robert napier .
1782midst1PLACE gladstone was then in the midst of his campaign .
1783house tax1PERSON to make his budget revenue-neutral , as funds were needed to provide defences against the french , he doubled the house tax and continued the income tax .
1784province1PLACE before his leadership of the conservative party , imperialism was the province of the liberals , most notably palmerston .
1785liking1LANGUAGE disraeli and lyndhurst took an immediate liking to each other .
1786brother ralph1PERSON april were his brother ralph and nephew coningsby , to whom hughenden would eventually pass ; gathorne gathorne-hardy , viscount cranbrook , despite most of disraeli 's former cabinet being present , was notably absent in italy .
1787sight1CONCLUSION it draws on the events of his affair with henrietta sykes to tell the story of a debt-ridden young man torn between a mercenary loveless marriage and a passionate love at first sight for the eponymous heroine .
1788sarah brydges willyams1PERSON the disraeli vault also contains the body of sarah brydges willyams , the wife of james brydges willyams of st mawgan .
1789prejudices1PERSON his detachment from english prejudices did not give him any particular insight into foreign affairs ; as a young man he accepted the platitudes of metternich and failed to understand the meaning of the nationalist movements in europe .
1790theory1COGNITIVE STATE further he wrote a discourse on political theory and a political biography , the life of lord george bentinck , which is excellent ... remarkably fair and accurate . "
1791albert1PERSON in this , he came into disagreement with the queen , who out of loyalty to her late husband albert preferred broad church teachings .
1792viewpoint1POSITION film historian roy armes has argued that historical films helped maintain the political status quo in britain in the 1920s and 1930s by imposing an establishment viewpoint that emphasized the greatness of monarchy , empire , and tradition .
1793week1PERIOD parliament was dissolved on 24 march ; the first borough constituencies began voting a week later .
1794promotion1RESULT he favoured low church clergymen in promotion , disliking other movements in anglicanism for political reasons .
1795door1ACT at the door of 10 downing street , disraeli received flowers sent by the queen .
1796unpopularity1PROPERTY because of disraeli 's unpopularity among the peelites , no party reconciliation was possible while he remained tory leader in the commons .
1797evola1PERSON mannheim * jünger * evola * strauss * röpke * gadamer * freyre *
1798leadership peel1PERSON bentinck and the leadership peel successfully steered the repeal of the corn laws through parliament and was then defeated by an alliance of his enemies on the issue of irish law and order ; he resigned in june 1846 .
1799corporatism1CONCEPT conservative liberalism * corporatism *
1800militants1PERSON the following january , sultan abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by hungarian statesman julius andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in serbia and bulgaria .
1801requisites1UNKNOWN he possesses all the necessary requisites of perfidy , selfishness , depravity , want of principle , etc. , which would qualify him for the change .
1802topics1EVENT ordoliberalism related topics * anti-communism + white terror *
1803rescue1TOOL one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
1804duality1ACT it is subtitled " a psychological autobiography " and depicts the conflicting elements of its hero 's character : the duality of northern and mediterranean ancestry , the dreaming artist and the bold man of action .
1805last1UNKNOWN disraeli wrote novels throughout his career , beginning in 1826 , and published his last completed novel , endymion , shortly before he died at the age of 76 .
1806natcon1UNKNOWN natcon * nativism * para-fascism *
1807bow mary anne lewis1PERSON a portrait of a young woman with elaborately styled brown hair , tied up with a blue bow mary anne lewis c. 1820-30 in 1839 disraeli married mary anne lewis , the widow of wyndham lewis .
1808financing1QUANTITY while these intrigues played out , disraeli was working with the bentinck family to secure the necessary financing to purchase hughenden manor , in buckinghamshire .
1809babble1PLACE disraeli called them " coffee-house babble " and dismissed allegations of torture by the ottomans since " oriental people usually terminate their connections with culprits in a more expeditious fashion " .
1810ottoman sultan1PERSON at the end of january 1878 , the ottoman sultan appealed to britain to save constantinople .
1811partition1PLACE the prime minister wanted a deal with the ottomans whereby britain would temporarily occupy strategic areas to deter the russians from war , to be returned on the signing of a peace treaty , but found little support in his cabinet , which favoured partition of the ottoman empire .
1812modernisation1UNKNOWN it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
1813background1INFORMATION the family was mostly from italy , of sephardic jewish mercantile background .
1814china1PLACE canada * chile * china + hong kong *
1815mann1PERSON in berlin , word spread of bismarck 's admiring description of disraeli , " der alte jude , das ist der mann !
1816horizons1PLACE he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
1817absentees1EVENT disraeli had little help from derby , who was ill , but he united the party enough on a no-confidence vote to limit the government to a majority of 18— tory defections and absentees kept palmerston in office .
1818cartoonists1PERSON todd endelman points out that " the link between jews and old clothes was so fixed in the popular imagination that victorian political cartoonists regularly drew benjamin disraeli as an old clothes man in order to stress his jewishness . "
1819one nation conservatism1PERSON
1820dukedom1UNKNOWN the queen offered him a dukedom , which he declined , though accepting the garter , as long as salisbury also received it .
1821low1ABSTRACT ENTITY after this unpromising start disraeli kept a low profile for the rest of the parliamentary session .
1822suez1PERSON disraeli arranged for the british to purchase a major interest in the suez canal company in egypt .
1823bevis marks synagogue1PERSON following a quarrel in 1813 with the bevis marks synagogue , his father renounced judaism and had the four children baptised into the church of england in july and august 1817 .
1824courts1EVENT disraeli 's government introduced a new factory act meant to protect workers , the conspiracy , and protection of property act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 86 ) , which allowed peaceful picketing , and the employers and workmen act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 90 ) to enable workers to sue employers in the civil courts if they broke legal contracts .
1825model1STYLE in the event , the speech was a model of its kind , in which he avoided comment on disraeli 's politics while praising his personal qualities .
1826request1REQUEST at the request of the french ambassador , palmerston proposed amending the conspiracy to murder statute to make creating an infernal device a felony .
1827executor1PERSON his literary executor was his private secretary , lord rowton .
1828knowledge1STATE disraeli , his closest ally , was his second choice and accepted , though disclaiming any great knowledge in the financial field .
1829montefiores1UNKNOWN he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
1830lgbt conservatism1ATTITUDE hispanic conservatism + us * lgbt conservatism *
1831works list1LOCATION isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
1832taxation1MONEY it remained the established church and was funded by direct taxation , which was greatly resented by the catholics and presbyterians .
1833works1UNKNOWN isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
1834sensation1ACTION nevertheless , the cyprus convention ceding the island to britain was announced during the congress , and again made disraeli a sensation .
1835resignation honours1UNKNOWN despite his public confidence , disraeli recognised that the conservatives would probably lose the next election and was already contemplating his resignation honours .
1836clerk1PERSON in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
1837governing coalition1GROUP ministry and knowing that shared dislike of disraeli was part of what had formed the governing coalition .
1838techniques1TECHNIQUE the earl , a friend of both disraeli and gladstone who would succeed the latter after his final term as prime minister , had journeyed to the united states to view politics there , and was convinced that aspects of american electioneering techniques could be translated to britain .
1839royal titles act main article1ARTICLE royal titles act main article : royal titles
1840liberal party leader william ewart gladstone1PERSON disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
1841help1UNKNOWN disraeli may have been attracted to the office by the £5,000 annual salary , which would help pay his debts .
1842reticent1UNKNOWN less reticent were palmerston , gladstone , and russell , whose statements in support of the south contributed to years of hard feelings in the united states .
1843natalism1CONCEPT monarchism + royalism * moral absolutism * natalism *
1844meloni religion1PERSON kaczyński * netanyahu * modi * putin * abe * bolsonaro * orbán * meloni religion *
1845sense1EVENT he has lugged up that great omnibus full of stupid , heavy , country gentlemen--i only say ' stupid ' in the parliamentary sense -and has converted these conservative into radical reformers .
1846nordau1PERSON nordau * belloc * iorga * chesterton *
1847boroughs1ESTATE it eliminated rotten boroughs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants , and granted constituencies to 15 unrepresented towns , with extra representation to large municipalities such as liverpool and manchester .
1848san stefano treaty1PLACE bulgaria as constituted under the san stefano treaty and as divided at berlin with the russians close to constantinople , the turks yielded and in march 1878 , signed the treaty of san stefano , conceding a bulgarian state covering a large part of the balkans .
1849duty1ATTITUDE duty * elitism + aristocracy + meritocracy + noblesse oblige *
1850insight1COGNITIVE STATE his detachment from english prejudices did not give him any particular insight into foreign affairs ; as a young man he accepted the platitudes of metternich and failed to understand the meaning of the nationalist movements in europe .
1851contemplation1STATE act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
1852francis grant1PERSON a young man of vaguely semitic appearance , with long and curly black hair portrait of benjamin disraeli by francis grant .
1853noblemen1UNKNOWN the small scottish electorate was dominated by two noblemen , the conservative duke of buccleuch and the liberal earl of rosebery .
1854wight1EVENT disraeli went to osborne house on the isle of wight , where the queen asked him to form a government .
1855decisions1DECISION in response , gladstone denied that personal feelings played any role in his decisions then and previously whether to accept office , while acknowledging that there were differences between him and derby " broader than you may have supposed " .
1856selfishness1QUALITY he possesses all the necessary requisites of perfidy , selfishness , depravity , want of principle , etc. , which would qualify him for the change .
1857baron rothschild1PERSON in 1884 nathan mayer rothschild , 1st baron rothschild , became the first jewish member of the british house of lords ;
1858third derby disraeli ministry after derby1PERSON
1859reform acts1ACT external videos video icon booknotes interview with stanley weintraub on disraeli : a biography , february 6 , 1994 , c-span stanley weintraub , in his biography of disraeli , points out that his subject did much to advance britain towards the 20th century , carrying one of the two great reform acts of the 19th despite the opposition of his liberal rival , gladstone .
1860refer1UNKNOWN suez portrait of disraeli published in 1873 refer to caption new crowns for old depicts disraeli as abanazar from the pantomime aladdin , offering victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one .
1861budget disraeli1PERSON budget disraeli 's task as chancellor was to devise a budget which would satisfy the protectionist elements who supported the tories , without uniting the free-traders against it .
1862staff1GOVERNMENT on 8 september 1879 sir louis cavagnari , in charge of the mission in kabul , was killed with his entire staff by rebelling afghan soldiers .
1863pantomime aladdin1PERSON suez portrait of disraeli published in 1873 refer to caption new crowns for old depicts disraeli as abanazar from the pantomime aladdin , offering victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one .
1864naphtali1PERSON isaac , maria and sarah disraeli 's siblings were sarah , naphtali ( born and died 1807 ) , ralph and james ( " jem " ) .
1865pakistan1PLACE mexico * netherlands * new zealand * norway * pakistan * panama * peru * poland *
1866wife mary anne viscountess1PERSON at his first departure from 10 downing street in 1868 , disraeli had victoria make his wife mary anne viscountess
1867results1RESULT in the wake of the poor election results , derby predicted to disraeli that neither of them would ever hold office again .
1868sir francis sykes1PERSON in 1834 he was introduced to the former lord chancellor , lord lyndhurst , by henrietta sykes , wife of sir francis sykes .
1869irish catholics1PERSON this divided the liberals , and on 12 march an alliance of conservatives and irish catholics defeated the government by three votes .
1870forebears1UNKNOWN he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
1871recovery1DECISION public support for disraeli was shown by cheering at a thanksgiving service in 1872 on the recovery of the prince of wales from illness , while gladstone was met with silence .
1872detachment1UNIT his detachment from english prejudices did not give him any particular insight into foreign affairs ; as a young man he accepted the platitudes of metternich and failed to understand the meaning of the nationalist movements in europe .
1873rump bereft1PERSON tory politician with experience of office followed peel , leaving the rump bereft of leadership .
1874mary anne lewis1PERSON a portrait of a young woman with elaborately styled brown hair , tied up with a blue bow mary anne lewis c. 1820-30 in 1839 disraeli married mary anne lewis , the widow of wyndham lewis .
1875hopes1EVENT despite this pessimism , conservatives hopes were buoyed in early 1880 with successes in by-elections the liberals had expected to win , concluding with victory in southwark , normally a liberal stronghold .
1876wish1PERSON he turned to writing , motivated partly by his desperate need for money , and partly by a wish for revenge on murray and others by whom he felt slighted .
1877rooms1ROOM it extended the franchise by 938,427 men—an increase of 88% —by giving the vote to male householders and male lodgers paying at least £10 for rooms .
1878malta1PLACE the cabinet discussed disraeli 's proposal to position indian troops at malta for possible transit to the balkans and call out reserves .
1879henry1PERSON he did not defeat the incumbent whig member , henry labouchere , but the taunton constituency was regarded as unwinnable by the tories .
1880description1ACT see description
1881jesus christ1PERSON urged by a clergyman to turn her thoughts to jesus christ in her final days , she said she could not : " you know dizzy is my j.c. " in 1873 , gladstone brought forward legislation to establish a catholic university in dublin .
1882viscount hughenden1PERSON in august 1876 , disraeli was elevated to the house of lords as earl of beaconsfield and viscount hughenden .
1883thackeray1PERSON disraeli continued to the last to pillory his enemies in barely disguised caricatures : the character st barbe in endymion is widely seen as a parody of thackeray , who had offended disraeli more than thirty years earlier by lampooning him in punch as " codlingsby " .
1884given gladstone1PERSON disraeli circa 1870 given gladstone 's majority in the commons , disraeli could do little but protest as the government advanced legislation ; he chose to await liberal mistakes .
1885disease1DISEASE despite this tragedy , and the need for treatment for a sexually transmitted disease on his return , disraeli felt enriched by his experiences .
1886white terror1INSTANCE ordoliberalism related topics * anti-communism + white terror *
1887authorship1PROCESS it sold well , but caused much offence in influential circles when the authorship was discovered .
1888villain1PERSON historian michael diamond asserts that for british music hall patrons in the 1880s and 1890s , " xenophobia and pride in empire " were reflected in the halls ' most popular political heroes : all were conservatives and disraeli stood out above all , even decades after his death , while gladstone was used as a villain .
1889young england group1GROUP after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
1890james1PERSON isaac , maria and sarah disraeli 's siblings were sarah , naphtali ( born and died 1807 ) , ralph and james ( " jem " ) .
1891production1OCCURRENCE this was my first production : puerile pedantry .
1892perils1SITUATION presenting jewishness as aristocratic and religious legitimized his claim to understand the perils facing modern england and to offer ' national ' solutions to them .
1893ministry1INSTITUTION ministry
1894depth1AMOUNT the new house of commons had more conservative than whig members , but the depth of the tory schism enabled russell to continue to govern .
1895guizot1PERSON ill 's judgement that he was ' like all literary men , from chateaubriand to guizot , ignorant of the world'....
1896council1HUMAN GROUP gladstone in 1870 had sponsored an order in council , introducing competitive examination into the civil service , diminishing the political aspects of government hiring .
1897revd1UNKNOWN i was at school for two or three years under the revd .
1898biographer r w davis1PERSON the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
1899interim1UNKNOWN in the interim , disraeli , as conservative leader in the commons , opposed the government on all major measures .
1900garrison1PERSON under lord roberts , the british easily defeated them and installed a new ruler , leaving a mission and garrison in kabul .
1901tory concepts1PERSON abbott writes , " to the mystical tory concepts of throne , church , aristocracy and people , disraeli added empire . "
1902ourselves1UNKNOWN disraeli wrote a personal letter to gladstone , asking him to place the good of the party above personal animosity : " every man performs his office , and there is a power , greater than ourselves , that disposes of all this . "
1903receptions1PERSON disraeli and salisbury returned home to heroes ' receptions .
1904intrigue1UNKNOWN lyndhurst was an indiscreet gossip with a fondness for intrigue ; this appealed greatly to disraeli , who became his secretary and go-between .
1905sir ian malcolm1PERSON sir ian malcolm described the suez canal share purchase as " the greatest romance of mr . disraeli 's romantic career " .
1906challenge1ACTION by 1872 there was dissent in the conservative ranks over the failure to challenge gladstone .
1907constituents1PERSON as a result of these social reforms the liberal-labour mp alexander macdonald told his constituents in 1879 , " the conservative party have done more for the working classes in five years than the liberals have in fifty . "
1908whig reform bill1PERSON coningsby attacks the evils of the whig reform bill of 1832 and castigates the leaderless conservatives for not responding .
1909meaning1PURPOSE his detachment from english prejudices did not give him any particular insight into foreign affairs ; as a young man he accepted the platitudes of metternich and failed to understand the meaning of the nationalist movements in europe .
1910right honourable the earl1PERSON the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
1911militia bill1PERSON tories to defeat the government on a militia bill , and russell resigned .
1912tory gains1PERSON derby dissolved parliament , and the ensuing general election resulted in modest tory gains , but not enough to control the commons .
1913smallest1PERSON two gentlemen , the second bearded derby ( top ) and northcote disraeli 's cabinet of twelve , with six peers and six commoners , was the smallest since reform .
1914stocks1PERSON built by french interests , 56 % of the stocks in the canal remained in their hands , while 44 % of the stock belonged to isma 'il pasha , the khedive of egypt .
1915authors1PERSON there was a vogue for what was called " silver-fork fiction " — novels depicting aristocratic life , usually by anonymous authors , read by the aspirational middle classes .
1916parliamentary career1NUMBER it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
1917half years1PERIOD only four and a half years had passed and they did not see any clouds on the horizon that might forecast conservative defeat if they waited .
1918december monarch victoria1PERSON
1919greenwood1PERSON on 14 november 1875 , the editor of the pall mall gazette , frederick greenwood , learned from london banker henry oppenheim that the khedive was seeking to sell his shares in the suez canal company to a french firm .
1920sir stafford northcote1PERSON lord stanley ( who had succeeded his father , the former prime minister , as earl of derby ) became foreign secretary and sir stafford northcote the chancellor .
1921statue1PERSON a statue on a podium statue of disraeli in parliament square , london disraeli is buried with his wife in a vault beneath the church of st michael and all angels which stands in the grounds of his home , hughenden manor .
1922realm1PLACE the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
1923trigger1CONCEPT disraeli 's biographer jonathan parry writes that the financial failure and personal criticism that disraeli suffered in 1825 and 1826 were probably the trigger for a serious nervous crisis affecting him over the next four years : " he had always been moody , sensitive , and solitary by nature , but now became seriously depressed and lethargic . "
1924thoughts1AMOUNT urged by a clergyman to turn her thoughts to jesus christ in her final days , she said she could not : " you know dizzy is my j.c. " in 1873 , gladstone brought forward legislation to establish a catholic university in dublin .
1925pragmatism1ACT muscular liberalism * noblesse oblige * paternalism * pragmatism *
1926absolutism1ABILITY monarchism + royalism * moral absolutism * natalism *
1927beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli1PERSON the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
1928publication1ACTION the choice of a tory publication was regarded as strange by disraeli 's friends and relatives , who thought him more of a radical .
1929construction1ABSTRACT ENTITY the thames purification bill funded the construction of much larger sewers for london .
1930lions1PERSON per saltire gules and argent a castle triple-towered in chief argent two lions rampant in fess sable and an eagle displayed in base or .
1931canada1PLACE canada * chile * china + hong kong *
1932historism1CONCEPT historism * honour * imperialism *
1933wig1HEAD first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
1934uncle1PERSON he enrolled as a student at lincoln 's inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , nathaniel basevy , and then those of benjamin austen , who persuaded isaac that disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
1935b. h. abbott1PERSON in 1972 b. h. abbott stressed that it was not disraeli but lord randolph churchill who invented the term " tory democracy " , though it was disraeli who made it an essential part of conservative policy and philosophy .
1936sidney herbert1PERSON
1937landowners1PERSON although ireland was largely roman catholic , the church of england represented most landowners .
1938trade dispute1DISPUTE act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
1939herzegovina1PLACE in july 1875 serb populations in bosnia and herzegovina , then provinces of the ottoman empire , revolted against the turks , alleging religious persecution and poor administration .
1940zulu impi1PERSON before they could arrive , on 22 january , a zulu impi ( army ) , moving with great speed and endurance , destroyed a british encampment in south africa in the battle of isandlwana .
1941sewers1EVENT the thames purification bill funded the construction of much larger sewers for london .
1942pinochetism1CONCEPT powellism * pinochetism * putinism *
1943struggles1FORCE there was intense public interest in disraeli 's struggles for life .
1944iceland1PLACE hungary * iceland * india * iran * israel *
1945skill1SKILL disraeli gained wide acclaim and became a hero to his party for the " marvellous parliamentary skill " with which he secured the passage of reform in the commons .
1946irish church1PERSON an initial attempt by disraeli to negotiate with archbishop manning the establishment of a catholic university in dublin foundered in march when gladstone moved resolutions to disestablish the irish church altogether .
1947property qualification1DOCUMENT even as disraeli accepted liberal amendments ( although pointedly refusing those moved by gladstone ) that further lowered the property qualification , cranborne was unable to lead an effective rebellion .
1948sovereignty1PLACE sovereignty *
1949sentiment1EVENT indeed , he had objected to murray about croker 's inserting " high tory " sentiment : disraeli remarked , " it is quite impossible that anything adverse to the general measure of reform can issue from my pen . "
1950contrast1RESULT stanley , in contrast , deprecated his inexperienced followers as a reason for not assuming office :
1951prose1ABSTRACT ENTITY he brought politics nearer to poetry , or , at all events , to poetical prose , than any english politician since burke .
1952rival gladstone1PERSON disraeli spoke in favour of the measure , arguing that christianity was " completed judaism " , and asking the house of commons " where is your christianity if you do not believe in their judaism ? " russell and disraeli 's future rival gladstone thought this brave ; the speech was badly received by his own party .
1953tory democrat1PERSON tory democrat : the 1867 reform act it was disraeli 's belief that if given the vote british people would use it instinctively to put their natural and traditional rulers , the gentlemen of the conservative party , into power .
1954victoria r1PLACE once the bill was formally enacted , victoria began signing her letters " victoria r & i " ( latin : regina et imperatrix , queen and empress ) .
1955bumper crops1NUMBER in the past , the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times , but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the united states , grain prices remained low .
1956united kingdom general election1PLACE main article : 1880 united kingdom general election
1957kandahar1PLACE a depiction of the battle of kandahar , fought in 1880 .
1958civil service disraeli1PERSON civil service disraeli 's failure to appoint samuel wilberforce as bishop of london may have cost him votes in the 1868 election .
1959patriotism1EVENT orthodoxy * patriotism *
1960motto forti nihili difficile notes1PERSON motto forti nihili difficile notes and references
1961adept1UNKNOWN once the desired bill was finally prepared , disraeli 's handling of it was not adept .
1962viscount cranbrook1PERSON april were his brother ralph and nephew coningsby , to whom hughenden would eventually pass ; gathorne gathorne-hardy , viscount cranbrook , despite most of disraeli 's former cabinet being present , was notably absent in italy .
1963burnham1PERSON burnham * lefebvre *
1964dean1PERSON as he had in government posts , disraeli rewarded old friends with clerical positions , making sydney turner , son of a good friend of isaac d' israeli , dean of ripon .
1965post office1PLACE it authorised an early version of nationalisation , having the post office buy up the telegraph companies .
1966palmerston loyalists1PERSON the liberals were healing the breaches between those who favoured russell and the palmerston loyalists , and in late march 1859 , the government was defeated on a russell-sponsored amendment .
1967october1PERIOD political plans were thrown into disarray by palmerston 's death on 18 october 1865 .
1968prussian crown princess1PERSON the monarch wrote to her daughter , prussian crown princess victoria , " mr . disraeli is prime minister !
1969opposition benches1ENTITY with the fall of the government , disraeli and the conservatives returned to the opposition benches .
1970prime minister robert peel1PERSON in 1846 , prime minister robert peel split the party over his proposal to repeal the corn laws , which involved ending the tariff on imported grain .
1971elitism1TRUST duty * elitism + aristocracy + meritocracy + noblesse oblige *
1972set backs1PERSON
1973lord john manners1PERSON lord john manners , in 1843 at the time of young england , wrote , " could i only satisfy myself that d'israeli believed all that he said , i should be more happy : his historical views are quite mine , but does he believe them ? "
1974colonies1SEQUENCE spain was losing its south american colonies in the face of rebellions .
1975critic shane leslie1PERSON critic shane leslie noted three decades after his death that " disraeli 's career was a romance such as no eastern vizier or western plutocrat could tell .
1976aisle1PLACE he was defeated by 19 votes on the second reading , with many liberals crossing the aisle against him .
1977bronchitis1UNKNOWN in march , he fell ill with bronchitis , and emerged from bed only for a meeting with salisbury and other conservative leaders on the 26th .
1978alec guinness1PERSON alec guinness portrayed him in the mudlark ( 1950 ) .
1979concessions1PERMISSION he spoke only once there in the 1877 session on the eastern question , stating on 20 february that there was a need for stability in the balkans , and that forcing turkey into territorial concessions would not secure it .
1980william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
1981public health1PROPERTY in addition , the public health ( scotland )
1982vogue1EVENT there was a vogue for what was called " silver-fork fiction " — novels depicting aristocratic life , usually by anonymous authors , read by the aspirational middle classes .
1983london disraeli1PERSON a statue on a podium statue of disraeli in parliament square , london disraeli is buried with his wife in a vault beneath the church of st michael and all angels which stands in the grounds of his home , hughenden manor .
1984bentinck family1HUMAN GROUP while these intrigues played out , disraeli was working with the bentinck family to secure the necessary financing to purchase hughenden manor , in buckinghamshire .
1985vizier1PLACE critic shane leslie noted three decades after his death that " disraeli 's career was a romance such as no eastern vizier or western plutocrat could tell .
1986qutbism1CONCEPT qutbism + khomeinism * reaganism *
1987dramas1STATE steven fielding has argued that disraeli was an especially popular film hero : " historical dramas favoured disraeli over gladstone and , more substantively , promulgated an essentially deferential view of democratic leadership . "
1988cities1SET under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
1989maria basevi signature cursive signature1PLACE isaac d' israeli * maria basevi signature cursive signature in ink writing career notable works list * * vivian grey *
1990offence1UNKNOWN it sold well , but caused much offence in influential circles when the authorship was discovered .
1991victories1CONDITION in 1878 , faced with russian victories against the ottomans , he worked at the congress of berlin to obtain peace in the balkans at terms favourable to britain and unfavourable to russia , its longstanding enemy .
1992victorian clothes1PERSON a middle-aged man in victorian clothes gladstone in the 1850s disraeli delivered the budget on 3 december 1852 , and prepared to wind up the debate for the government on 16 december—it was customary for the chancellor to have the last word .
1993exploitation1PERSON they held that the landed interests should use their power to protect the poor from exploitation by middle-class businessmen .
1994resentment1PERSON after that , disraeli 's influence on murray waned , and to his resentment he was sidelined in the affairs of the representative .
1995aesthete1PERSON he began as a pioneer in dress and an aesthete of words ...
1996shelley1PERSON his other novel of this period is venetia , a romance based on the characters of shelley and byron , written quickly to raise much-needed money .
1997misgivings1POSITION in the absence of a credible party rival and for fear of having an election called on the issue , conservatives felt obliged to support disraeli despite their misgivings .
1998trumpism1CONCEPT sarkozysm * thatcherism * trumpism * ziaism national variants *
1999supporters dexter1PERSON supporters dexter an eagle
2000orsini affair1PERSON palmerston 's grip on the premiership was weakened by his response to the orsini affair , in which an attempt was made to assassinate the french emperor napoleon iii by an italian revolutionary with a bomb made in birmingham .
2001pole1PERSON the new prime minister told those who came to congratulate him , " i have climbed to the top of the greasy pole . "
2002staunchest1PERSON the critic robert o' kell , concurring , writes , " it is after all , even if you are a tory of the staunchest blue , impossible to make disraeli into a first-rate novelist .
2003derby government main article1ARTICLE chancellor of the exchequer first derby government main article : who ?
2004berlusconism1CONCEPT berlusconism * bukelism * cameronism *
2005ancestors1WORD he also had some ashkenazi jewish ancestors .
2006kohl1PERSON thatcher * kohl * fujimori * bush * trump *
2007turner1PERSON isaac 's friend sharon turner , a solicitor , convinced him that although he could comfortably remain unattached to any formal religion it would be disadvantageous to the children if they did so .
2008peru1PLACE mexico * netherlands * new zealand * norway * pakistan * panama * peru * poland *
2009acclaim1STATEMENT after disraeli won widespread acclaim in march 1842 for worsting lord palmerston in debate , he was taken up by a small group of idealistic new tory mps , with whom he formed the young england group .
2010worship1PERSON he consequently was a strong supporter of the public worship regulation
2011tribes1WORD the governor of cape colony , sir bartle frere , believing that the federation could not be accomplished until the native tribes acknowledged british rule , made demands on the zulu and their king , cetewayo , which they were certain to reject .
2012old depicts disraeli1PERSON suez portrait of disraeli published in 1873 refer to caption new crowns for old depicts disraeli as abanazar from the pantomime aladdin , offering victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one .
2013schools1UNKNOWN it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
2014school chosen1UNKNOWN the school chosen for him was run by eliezer cogan at higham hill in walthamstow .
2015bradford comment1PERSON although biographers including robert blake and bradford comment that such a post was incompatible with disraeli 's romantic and ambitious nature , he reportedly gave his employers satisfactory service , and later professed to have learned much there .
2016tory reform group1GROUP conservative party * tory reform group *
2017reassured1UNKNOWN reassured , he wrote to the queen , resigning and recommending disraeli as " only he could command the cordial support , en masse , of his present colleagues " .
2018complementarianism1CONCEPT gender roles + complementarianism + essentialism *
2019successor disraeli1PERSON a young man with dark hair and huge sideburns lord robert cecil , disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli led a toothless opposition in the commons—seeing no way of unseating palmerston , derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
2020image1IMAGE disraeli cultivated a public image of himself as an imperialist with grand gestures such as conferring on queen victoria the title " empress of india " .
2021extravagances1AMOUNT and it is equally impossible , no matter how much you deplore the extravagances and improprieties of his works , to make him into an insignificant one . "
2022ilyin1UNKNOWN ilyin * savarkar *
2023reza shah1PERSON reza shah *
2024writer1PERSON lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
2025vote british people1HUMAN GROUP tory democrat : the 1867 reform act it was disraeli 's belief that if given the vote british people would use it instinctively to put their natural and traditional rulers , the gentlemen of the conservative party , into power .
2026tower argent1PERSON or sinister a lion or each gorged with a collar gules and pendent therefrom an escutcheon of the last charged with a tower argent .
2027ability1ABILITY he had far-reaching schemes but little administrative ability , and there was some foundation for napoleon
2028sydney turner1PERSON as he had in government posts , disraeli rewarded old friends with clerical positions , making sydney turner , son of a good friend of isaac d' israeli , dean of ripon .
2029zulu troops1HUMAN GROUP as zulu troops could not marry until they had washed their spears in blood , they were eager for combat .
2030elizabeth ii1PERSON protocol forbade her attending disraeli 's funeral ( this would not be changed until 1965 , when elizabeth ii attended the rites for the former prime minister sir winston churchill ) but she sent primroses ( " his favourite flowers " ) to the funeral and visited the burial vault to place a wreath four days later .
2031drugs1DRUG also enacted were the public health act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 55 ) , modernising sanitary codes , the sale of food and drugs act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 63 ) , and the elementary education act 1876 ( 39 & 40 vict . c. 70 ) .
2032winchester college1INSTITUTION it is not known whether disraeli formed any ambition for a parliamentary career at the time of his baptism , but there is no doubt that he bitterly regretted his parents ' decision not to send him to winchester college , one of the great public schools which consistently provided recruits to the political elite .
2033baron lionel de rothschild1PERSON in 1858 , baron lionel de rothschild became the first mp to profess the jewish faith .
2034pitt1PERSON adams * pitt * canning * metternich *
2035details1PERSON the earl of derby preceded by sir charles wood , 3rd baronet succeeded by william ewart gladstone personal details born benjamin d' israeli ( 1804-12-21) 21 december 1804 bloomsbury , middlesex , england died 19 april 1881( 1881-04-19 ) ( aged 76 ) mayfair , london , england political party conservative other political affiliations young england ( 1840s )
2036puerile pedantry1UNKNOWN this was my first production : puerile pedantry .
2037feminism1PERSON conservative feminism * conservative socialism * conservative wave *
2038screen actor george arliss1PERSON stage and screen actor george arliss was known for his portrayals of disraeli , winning the academy award for best actor for 1929 's disraeli .
2039student1PERSON he enrolled as a student at lincoln 's inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , nathaniel basevy , and then those of benjamin austen , who persuaded isaac that disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
2040inn1GOVERNMENT he enrolled as a student at lincoln 's inn and joined the chambers of his uncle , nathaniel basevy , and then those of benjamin austen , who persuaded isaac that disraeli would never make a barrister and should be allowed to pursue a literary career .
2041nationalism1SET nationalism *
2042popanilla1UNKNOWN popanilla * the young duke * contarini fleming * ixion in heaven * the wondrous tale of alroy *
2043whig oligarchs1UNKNOWN the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
2044william gladstone1PERSON the president of the board of trade , william gladstone , resigned from the cabinet over the maynooth grant .
2045dogma1RULE it was couched in the form of an open letter to lyndhurst , and in bradford 's view encapsulates a political philosophy that disraeli adhered to for the rest of his life : the value of benevolent aristocratic government , a loathing of political dogma , and the modernisation of tory policies .
2046pas de deux1PLACE refer to caption disraeli ( right ) and salisbury as knights of the garter , portrayed by john tenniel in the pas de deux ( from the scène de triomphe in the grand anglo-turkish ballet d'action )
2047propaganda1STATE with lyndhurst 's encouragement disraeli turned to writing propaganda for his newly adopted party .
2048bag1UNKNOWN paul smith , in his journal article on disraeli 's politics , argues that disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the british political pantheon . "
2049confederation1STATE the party truce ended in 1864 , with tories outraged over palmerston 's handling of the territorial dispute between the german confederation and denmark known as the schleswig-holstein question .
2050print1SPEECH ACT when cecil 's father objected , lord robert stated , " i have merely put into print what all the country gentlemen were saying in private . "
2051pearse1PERSON in november 1821 , shortly before his seventeenth birthday , disraeli was articled as a clerk to a firm of solicitors— swain , stevens , maples , pearse and hunt—in the city of london .
2052strength1PERSON peace through strength *
2053stances1PROPERTY however , the best known of these stances were over the maynooth grant in 1845 and the repeal of the corn laws in 1846 .
2054mansfield1PERSON sowell * mansfield * scruton *
2055bedford row1PERSON king 's road , bedford row , bloomsbury , london , the second child and eldest son of isaac d' israeli , a literary critic and historian , and maria ( miriam ) , née basevi .
2056napoleon ill1PERSON
2057income1DISEASE twelve years disraeli 's senior , mary lewis had a substantial income of £5,000 a year .
2058breaches1AMOUNT the liberals were healing the breaches between those who favoured russell and the palmerston loyalists , and in late march 1859 , the government was defeated on a russell-sponsored amendment .
2059furtherance1ACT act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
2060crimea1PLACE the khedive governed egypt under the ottoman empire ; as in the crimea , the issue of the canal raised the eastern question of what to do about the decaying empire governed from constantinople .
2061smith1PERSON paul smith , in his journal article on disraeli 's politics , argues that disraeli 's ideas were coherently argued over a political career of nearly half a century , and " it is impossible to sweep them aside as a mere bag of burglar 's tools for effecting felonious entry to the british political pantheon . "
2062lord robert1PERSON among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
2063frederick greenwood1PERSON on 14 november 1875 , the editor of the pall mall gazette , frederick greenwood , learned from london banker henry oppenheim that the khedive was seeking to sell his shares in the suez canal company to a french firm .
2064questions1QUESTION as part of that change , gladstone took on the office of chancellor , leading to questions as to whether he had to stand for re-election on taking on a second ministry— until the 1920s , mps becoming ministers had to seek re-election .
2065authoritarian1PERSON part of a series on conservatism variants * authoritarian *
2066no confidence vote1EVENT
2067imagination1ABILITY todd endelman points out that " the link between jews and old clothes was so fixed in the popular imagination that victorian political cartoonists regularly drew benjamin disraeli as an old clothes man in order to stress his jewishness . "
2068karamzin1UNKNOWN czartoryski * coleridge * karamzin *
2069rev john potticary1PERSON two years later or so— the exact date has not been ascertained— he was sent as a boarder to rev john potticary 's school at blackheath .
2070back benches1ENTITY though disappointed at being left on the back benches , he continued his support for peel in 1842 and 1843 , seeking to establish himself as an expert on foreign affairs and international trade .
2071impulse1EVENT some historians have commented on a romantic impulse behind disraeli 's approach to empire and foreign affairs :
2072concern1PERSON in the following decades , the security of the suez canal became a major concern of british foreign policy .
2073finance disraeli1PERSON the other was wyndham lewis , who helped finance disraeli 's election campaign , and who died the following year .
2074feudal1UNKNOWN as parry observes , the book ends on a political note , setting out europe 's progress " from feudal to federal principles " .
2075fear1EMOTION in the absence of a credible party rival and for fear of having an election called on the issue , conservatives felt obliged to support disraeli despite their misgivings .
2076encampment1ACT before they could arrive , on 22 january , a zulu impi ( army ) , moving with great speed and endurance , destroyed a british encampment in south africa in the battle of isandlwana .
2077historian michael diamond1PERSON historian michael diamond asserts that for british music hall patrons in the 1880s and 1890s , " xenophobia and pride in empire " were reflected in the halls ' most popular political heroes : all were conservatives and disraeli stood out above all , even decades after his death , while gladstone was used as a villain .
2078clothes man1PERSON todd endelman points out that " the link between jews and old clothes was so fixed in the popular imagination that victorian political cartoonists regularly drew benjamin disraeli as an old clothes man in order to stress his jewishness . "
2079general sir garnet wolseley1PERSON disraeli sent general sir garnet wolseley as high commissioner and commander in chief , and cetewayo and the zulus were crushed at the battle of ulundi on 4 july 1879 .
2080plots1RESOURCE one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
2081radical reformers1PERSON he has lugged up that great omnibus full of stupid , heavy , country gentlemen--i only say ' stupid ' in the parliamentary sense--and has converted these conservative into radical reformers .
2082part belief1TRUST disraeli 's biographer , adam kirsch , suggests that disraeli 's obsequious treatment of his queen was part flattery , part belief that this was how a queen should be addressed by a loyal subject , and part awe that a middle-class man of jewish birth should be the companion of a monarch .
2083lion1PERSON or sinister a lion or each gorged with a collar gules and pendent therefrom an escutcheon of the last charged with a tower argent .
2084bolsonaro1UNKNOWN kaczyński * netanyahu * modi * putin * abe * bolsonaro * orbán * meloni religion *
2085para fascism1EVENT
2086maidstone seat1PROPERTY finding the financial demands of his maidstone seat too much , disraeli secured a tory nomination for shrewsbury , winning one of the constituency 's two seats at the 1841 general election , despite serious opposition , and heavy debts which opponents seized on .
2087tension1EMOTION at the start of the next session , affairs were handled by a triumvirate of granby , disraeli , and john charles herries— indicative of the tension between disraeli and the rest of the party , who needed his talents but mistrusted him .
2088integralism1CONCEPT theravada buddhism * traditionalist catholicism + integralism + ultramontanism * traditionalist school personal variants *
2089endymion benjamin disraeli1PERSON lothair * endymion benjamin disraeli , 1st earl of beaconsfield ( 21 december 1804 - 19 april 1881 ) was a british statesman , conservative politician and writer who twice served as prime minister of the united kingdom .
2090british run cape colony1PERSON
2091koselleck1PERSON kirk * solzhenitsyn * koselleck * mishima *
2092front bench1ENTITY opposition and third term as chancellor main article : third derby-disraeli ministry after derby 's second ejection from office , disraeli faced dissension within conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister warned disraeli of some mps seeking his removal from the front bench .
2093party truce1AGREEMENT the party truce ended in 1864 , with tories outraged over palmerston 's handling of the territorial dispute between the german confederation and denmark known as the schleswig-holstein question .
2094ian mcshane1PERSON ian mcshane starred in the four-part 1978 atv miniseries disraeli : portrait of a romantic , written by david butler .
2095drew benjamin disraeli1PERSON todd endelman points out that " the link between jews and old clothes was so fixed in the popular imagination that victorian political cartoonists regularly drew benjamin disraeli as an old clothes man in order to stress his jewishness . "
2096poll1PERSON the conservatives remained in office because the new electoral register was not yet ready ; neither party wished a poll under the old roll .
2097opposition leader1PERSON opposition leader ; 1874 election
2098roberts1PERSON salisbury ignored these instructions , which his biographer , andrew roberts deemed " ludicrous " .
2099william kuhn1PERSON the critic william kuhn suggests that disraeli 's fiction can be read as " the memoirs he never wrote " , revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard to what kuhn sees as the author 's " ambiguous sexuality " .
2100hartington1PLACE in office 21 april 1880 - 19 april 1881 monarch victoria prime minister william ewart gladstone preceded by marquess of hartington succeeded by the marquess of salisbury
2101rallies1INCREASE one essay ended : the english nation , therefore , rallies for rescue from the degrading plots of a profligate oligarchy , a barbarizing sectarianism , and a boroughmongering papacy , round their hereditary leaders — the peers .
2102time being1UNKNOWN in the aftermath of the debate bentinck resigned the leadership and was succeeded by lord granby ; disraeli 's speech , thought by many of his own party to be blasphemous , ruled him out for the time being .
2103circumstances1EVENT other european nations , faced with similar circumstances , opted for protection , and disraeli was urged to reinstitute the corn laws .
2104hume1PERSON hume * burke *
2105ultramontanism1CONCEPT theravada buddhism * traditionalist catholicism + integralism + ultramontanism * traditionalist school personal variants *
2106link1ELEMENT todd endelman points out that " the link between jews and old clothes was so fixed in the popular imagination that victorian political cartoonists regularly drew benjamin disraeli as an old clothes man in order to stress his jewishness . "
2107quarter1PLACE among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
2108authorities1STATUS isaac 's father , benjamin , was a prominent and devout member ; it was probably out of respect for him that isaac did not leave when he fell out with the synagogue authorities in 1813 .
2109provision1UNKNOWN the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
2110chancellor main article1ARTICLE opposition and third term as chancellor main article : third derby-disraeli ministry after derby 's second ejection from office , disraeli faced dissension within conservative ranks from those who blamed him for the defeat , or who felt he was disloyal to derby— the former prime minister warned disraeli of some mps seeking his removal from the front bench .
2111effect1EFFECT he was troubled by the growth of elaborate rituals in the late 19th century , such as the use of incense and vestments , and heard warnings to the effect that the ritualists were going to turn control of the church of england over to the pope .
2112reptile1UNKNOWN daniel o'connell , misled by inaccurate press reports , thought disraeli had slandered him while electioneering at taunton ; he launched an outspoken attack , referring to disraeli as : a reptile ...
2113frances1UNKNOWN frances
2114rosebery1PERSON the small scottish electorate was dominated by two noblemen , the conservative duke of buccleuch and the liberal earl of rosebery .
2115courage1PERSON disraeli 's courage , quickness of wit , capacity for affection , and freedom from sordid motives earned him his position .
2116liberal party1FORCE disraeli is remembered for his influential voice in world affairs , his political battles with the liberal party leader william ewart gladstone , and his one-nation conservatism or " tory democracy " .
2117madam1PERSON disraeli told the queen , " it is settled ; you have it , madam ! "
2118knee1STATE when disraeli returned as prime minister in 1874 and went to kiss hands , he did so literally , on one knee ; according to richard aldous in his book on the rivalry between disraeli and gladstone , " victoria and disraeli would exploit their closeness for mutual advantage . "
2119selina1PERSON disraeli made various statements about his elevation , writing to selina , lady bradford on 8 august 1876 , " i am quite tired of that place " but when asked by a friend how he liked the lords , replied , " i am dead ; dead but in the elysian fields . "
2120provisions1UNKNOWN his proposed budget , which he presented to the commons on 3 december , lowered the taxes on malt and tea , provisions designed to appeal to the working class .
2121spirituality1INSTANCE the last was tancred ; or , the new crusade ( 1847 ) , promoting the church of england 's role in reviving britain 's flagging spirituality .
2122judgement1UNKNOWN ill 's judgement that he was ' like all literary men , from chateaubriand to guizot , ignorant of the world'....
2123protectionist cabinet1EVENT with the exception of disraeli , every member of the future protectionist cabinet then in parliament voted against the measure .
2124party politics1ACTION the start of the crimean war in 1854 caused a lull in party politics ;
2125macmillan1PERSON baldwin * macmillan * butler * howard *
2126equal1PERSON the employers and workmen act 1875 , according to one study , " finally placed employers and employed on an equal footing before the law " .
2127court1EVENT act 1874 which allowed the archbishops to go to court to stop the ritualists .
2128united states related ideologies1PLACE south korea * taiwan * turkey * ukraine * united kingdom * united states related ideologies * agrarianism *
2129nephew coningsby1PERSON april were his brother ralph and nephew coningsby , to whom hughenden would eventually pass ; gathorne gathorne-hardy , viscount cranbrook , despite most of disraeli 's former cabinet being present , was notably absent in italy .
2130closest1UNKNOWN disraeli , his closest ally , was his second choice and accepted , though disclaiming any great knowledge in the financial field .
2131capital1PLACE the banker 's capital was at risk as parliament could have refused to ratify the transaction .
2132ukraine1PLACE south korea * taiwan * turkey * ukraine * united kingdom * united states related ideologies * agrarianism *
2133evils1ABSTRACT ENTITY coningsby attacks the evils of the whig reform bill of 1832 and castigates the leaderless conservatives for not responding .
2134confucianism1CONCEPT confucianism *
2135hungry1UNKNOWN he was backed by his party , hungry for office and its emoluments after almost thirty years with only brief spells in government .
2136houses1UNKNOWN he was still living with his parents in london , but in search of the " change of air " recommended by the family 's doctors , isaac took a succession of houses in the country and on the coast , before disraeli sought wider horizons .
2137roland quinault1PERSON roland quinault , however , cautions not to exaggerate the confrontation : they were not direct antagonists for most of their political careers .
2138president1PERSON the president of the board of trade , william gladstone , resigned from the cabinet over the maynooth grant .
2139voters1PERSON he made the conservatives the party most identified with the british empire and military action to expand it , both of which were popular among british voters .
2140coleridge1PERSON czartoryski * coleridge * karamzin *
2141telegraph companies1PERSON it authorised an early version of nationalisation , having the post office buy up the telegraph companies .
2142fiancé1UNKNOWN 1830-1837 together with his sister 's fiancé , william meredith , disraeli travelled widely in southern europe and beyond in 1830-31 .
2143persons1PERSON act 1875 established the right to strike by providing that " an agreement or combination by one or more persons to do , or procure to be done , any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen , shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime " .
2144question1QUESTION disraeli 's second term was dominated by the eastern question — the slow decay of the ottoman empire and the desire of other european powers , such as russia , to gain at its expense .
2145voting register1UNIT first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
2146biographer robert blake1PERSON nevertheless , his biographer robert blake doubts that his subject had specific ideas about foreign policy when he took office in 1874 .
2147memoirs1ABSTRACT ENTITY the critic william kuhn suggests that disraeli 's fiction can be read as " the memoirs he never wrote " , revealing the inner life of a politician for whom the norms of victorian public life appeared to represent a social straitjacket— particularly with regard to what kuhn sees as the author 's " ambiguous sexuality " .
2148priests1PERSON the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
2149protectionism1SYSTEM disraeli 's political views embraced certain radical policies , particularly electoral reform , and also some tory ones , including protectionism .
2150prominent1ACT isaac 's father , benjamin , was a prominent and devout member ; it was probably out of respect for him that isaac did not leave when he fell out with the synagogue authorities in 1813 .
2151venetian descent1PLACE he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
2152grasp1EVENT gladstone 's biographer philip magnus contrasted disraeli 's grasp of foreign affairs with that of gladstone , who " never understood that high moral principles , in their application to foreign policy , are more often destructive of political stability than motives of national self-interest . "
2153magazine1PLACE popular culture disraeli , the first person caricatured in the london magazine vanity fair , 30 january 1869 .
2154park1PLACE pinochet * marcos * park * smith *
2155british house1PLACE in 1884 nathan mayer rothschild , 1st baron rothschild , became the first jewish member of the british house of lords ;
2156lee1PERSON suharto * lee * zia * vajpayee *
2157sea journey1PLACE the suez canal , opened in 1869 , cut weeks and thousands of miles off the sea journey between britain and india ; in 1875 , approximately 80 % of the ships using the canal were british .
2158facts1UNKNOWN sarah bradford believes " his dislike of the commonplace would not allow him to accept the facts of his birth as being as middle-class and undramatic as they really were " .
2159tradition intellectuals1PERSON stewardship * subsidiarity * tradition intellectuals * johnson *
2160line1PERSON disraeli kept labouchere 's majority down to 170 , a good showing that put him in line for a winnable seat in the near future .
2161party reconciliation1UNKNOWN because of disraeli 's unpopularity among the peelites , no party reconciliation was possible while he remained tory leader in the commons .
2162volumes1AMOUNT disraeli 's first novel , vivian grey , published anonymously in four volumes in 1826-27 , was a thinly veiled re-telling of the affair of the representative .
2163working class1UNKNOWN disraeli was sympathetic to some of the aims of chartism , and argued for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working class against the increasing power of the merchants and new industrialists in the middle class .
2164start disraeli1PERSON after this unpromising start disraeli kept a low profile for the rest of the parliamentary session .
2165parallel1PROPOSITION there were tory dissenters , most notably lord cranborne ( as robert cecil was by then known ) who resigned from the government and spoke against the bill , accusing disraeli of " a political betrayal which has no parallel in our parliamentary annals " .
2166byron1PERSON his other novel of this period is venetia , a romance based on the characters of shelley and byron , written quickly to raise much-needed money .
2167powellism1CONCEPT powellism * pinochetism * putinism *
2168maistre1UNKNOWN more * maistre * bonald * chateaubriand *
2169fujimori1PERSON thatcher * kohl * fujimori * bush * trump *
2170workman1PERSON one card , signed " a workman " , delighted its recipient :
2171address1UNKNOWN when parliament assembled , derby 's government was defeated by 13 votes on an amendment to the address from the throne .
2172reviewers1PERSON reviewers were sharply critical on these grounds of both the author and the book .
2173careers1NUMBER roland quinault , however , cautions not to exaggerate the confrontation : they were not direct antagonists for most of their political careers .
2174czar alexander ii1PERSON czar alexander ii later described the congress as " a european coalition against russia , under bismarck " .
2175card1GROUP one card , signed " a workman " , delighted its recipient :
2176board1NUMBER the president of the board of trade , william gladstone , resigned from the cabinet over the maynooth grant .
2177goldsmids1UNKNOWN he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
2178film historian roy armes1PERSON film historian roy armes has argued that historical films helped maintain the political status quo in britain in the 1920s and 1930s by imposing an establishment viewpoint that emphasized the greatness of monarchy , empire , and tradition .
2179perfidy1UNKNOWN he possesses all the necessary requisites of perfidy , selfishness , depravity , want of principle , etc. , which would qualify him for the change .
2180nativism1CONCEPT natcon * nativism * para-fascism *
2181ties1PERSON as a leader of the conservative party , which had ties to the landed aristocracy , disraeli used his jewish ancestry to claim an aristocratic heritage of his own .
2182judge1PERSON first government , february-december 1868 four men , the second of whom wears a wig resembling that of a judge , and the fourth of whom wears clerical clothes clockwise from top left : chelmsford , cairns , hunt and manning the conservatives remained a minority in the house of commons and the passage of the reform bill required the calling of a new election once the new voting register had been compiled .
2183alternative1EVENT for disraeli , the lords , where the debate was less intense , was the alternative to resignation .
2184sarkozysm1UNKNOWN sarkozysm * thatcherism * trumpism * ziaism national variants *
2185attitudes1ATTITUDE the journey encouraged his self-consciousness , his moral relativism , and his interest in eastern racial and religious attitudes . "
2186pilgrim1PERSON lothair was " disraeli 's ideological pilgrim 's progress " , it tells a story of political life with particular regard to the roles of the anglican and roman catholic churches .
2187sweden1PLACE russia * serbia * singapore * sweden *
2188osborne house1PLACE disraeli went to osborne house on the isle of wight , where the queen asked him to form a government .
2189balmoral1ABSTRACT ENTITY she did so again in 1874 , when he fell ill at balmoral , but he was reluctant to leave the commons for a house in which he had no experience .
2190rhine1PERSON disraeli toured belgium and the rhine valley with his father in the summer of 1824 .
2191ennoblement1UNKNOWN newspapers reported his ennoblement the following morning .
2192cecil1PERSON among the conspirators were lord robert cecil , a conservative mp who would a quarter century later become prime minister as lord salisbury ; he wrote that having disraeli as leader in the commons decreased the conservatives ' chance of holding office .
2193many conservative mps1UNKNOWN many conservative mps refused to follow him , and the bill passed the commons easily .
2194disraeli disraeli1PERSON a death mask resembling disraeli disraeli 's death mask a grave disraeli 's tomb at hughenden returning to hughenden , disraeli brooded over his electoral dismissal , but also resumed work on endymion , which he had begun in 1872 and laid aside before the 1874 election .
2195william ewart gladstone leader1PERSON in office 27 february 1868 - 1 december 1868 monarch victoria preceded by the earl of derby succeeded by william ewart gladstone leader of the opposition
2196clergymen1DEVICE he favoured low church clergymen in promotion , disliking other movements in anglicanism for political reasons .
2197john everett millais1PERSON one nation conservatives caucus * conservatism portal * icon politics portal * flag united kingdom portal * v * t * e portrait of benjamin disraeli by john everett millais , 1881
2198property1PROPERTY even as disraeli accepted liberal amendments ( although pointedly refusing those moved by gladstone ) that further lowered the property qualification , cranborne was unable to lead an effective rebellion .
2199kars1PLACE the russians were willing to make changes to the big bulgaria , but were determined to retain their new possessions , bessarabia in europe and batum and kars on the east coast of the black sea .
2200natal1PERSON british policy in south africa was to encourage federation between the british-run cape colony and natal , and the boer republics , the transvaal ( annexed by britain in 1877 ) and the orange free state .
2201artisans1PERSON under the stewardship of richard assheton cross , the home secretary , disraeli 's new government enacted many reforms , including the artisans ' and labourers ' dwellings improvement act 1875 ( 38 & 39 vict . c. 36 ) , which made inexpensive loans available to towns and cities to construct working-class housing .
2202hierarchy1UNKNOWN social hierarchy *
2203fathers dream1PERSON the firm had a large and profitable business , and as the biographer r w davis observes , the clerkship was " the kind of secure , respectable position that many fathers dream of for their children " .
2204siblings1PERSON isaac , maria and sarah disraeli 's siblings were sarah , naphtali ( born and died 1807 ) , ralph and james ( " jem " ) .
2205lines1PERSON the french might also threaten those lines .
2206latin1UNKNOWN once the bill was formally enacted , victoria began signing her letters " victoria r & i " ( latin : regina et imperatrix , queen and empress ) .
2207party manager john eldon gorst1PERSON disraeli had supported the efforts of party manager john eldon gorst to put the administration of the conservative party on a modern basis .
2208dress1SET he began as a pioneer in dress and an aesthete of words ...
2209delegates disraeli1PERSON by one account , the british ambassador in berlin , lord odo russell , hoping to spare the delegates disraeli 's very poor french accent , told disraeli that the congress was hoping to hear a speech in english by one of its masters .
2210sixth1RESULT of the peers , five of them had been in disraeli 's 1868 cabinet ; the sixth , lord salisbury , was reconciled to disraeli after negotiation and became secretary of state for india .
2211fact1UNKNOWN he later romanticised his origins , claiming his father 's family was of grand portuguese and venetian descent ; in fact , isaac 's family was of no great distinction , but on disraeli 's mother 's side , in which he took no interest , there were some distinguished forebears , including isaac cardoso , as well as members of the goldsmids , the mocattas and the montefiores .
2212carlton club1INSTITUTION disraeli was elected to the exclusively tory carlton club in 1836 , and was also taken up by the party 's leading hostess , lady londonderry .
2213nottingham bernal ostborne1PERSON mp for nottingham bernal ostborne declared : i have always thought the chancellor of exchequer was the greatest radical in the house .
2214bribery1EVENT act did much to end electoral bribery .
2215abe1PERSON kaczyński * netanyahu * modi * putin * abe * bolsonaro * orbán * meloni religion *
2216imperialist1PERSON disraeli cultivated a public image of himself as an imperialist with grand gestures such as conferring on queen victoria the title " empress of india " .
2217school law1PERSON amendments to the school law , the scottish legal system , and the railway laws were passed .
2218anglo afghan war1EVENT
2219essentialism1CONCEPT gender roles + complementarianism + essentialism *
2220organicism1CONCEPT organicism *
2221summer1PERSON disraeli toured belgium and the rhine valley with his father in the summer of 1824 .
2222bow tie1PERSON the right honourable the earl of beaconsfield kg pc dl jp frs disraeli in old age , wearing a double-breasted suit , bow tie and hat 1878 portrait prime minister of the united kingdom
2223tory defections1PERSON disraeli had little help from derby , who was ill , but he united the party enough on a no-confidence vote to limit the government to a majority of 18— tory defections and absentees kept palmerston in office .
2224go between1ABSTRACT ENTITY
2225elevation1EVENT disraeli made various statements about his elevation , writing to selina , lady bradford on 8 august 1876 , " i am quite tired of that place " but when asked by a friend how he liked the lords , replied , " i am dead ; dead but in the elysian fields . "
2226proceedings1ACTION he wrote regular reports on proceedings in the commons to victoria , who described them as " very curious " and " much in the style of his books " .
2227orange free state1STATE british policy in south africa was to encourage federation between the british-run cape colony and natal , and the boer republics , the transvaal ( annexed by britain in 1877 ) and the orange free state .
2228improprieties1CONDITION and it is equally impossible , no matter how much you deplore the extravagances and improprieties of his works , to make him into an insignificant one . "
2229maidstone1UNKNOWN in the election in july 1837 , disraeli won a seat in the house of commons as one of two members , both tory , for the constituency of maidstone .
2230lieu1PERSON beaconsfield in her own right in lieu of a peerage for himself .
2231years disraeli1PERSON twelve years disraeli 's senior , mary lewis had a substantial income of £5,000 a year .
2232intrigues1UNKNOWN while these intrigues played out , disraeli was working with the bentinck family to secure the necessary financing to purchase hughenden manor , in buckinghamshire .
2233deaf1UNKNOWN few of the new cabinet had held office before ; when derby tried to inform the duke of wellington of the names of the ministers , the old duke , who was somewhat deaf , inadvertently branded the new government by incredulously repeating " who ?
2234lord randolph churchill1PERSON in 1972 b. h. abbott stressed that it was not disraeli but lord randolph churchill who invented the term " tory democracy " , though it was disraeli who made it an essential part of conservative policy and philosophy .
2235john charles1PERSON at the start of the next session , affairs were handled by a triumvirate of granby , disraeli , and john charles herries— indicative of the tension between disraeli and the rest of the party , who needed his talents but mistrusted him .
2236promoter1RANK disraeli often wrote about religion , for he was a strong promoter of the church of england .
2237hungarian statesman julius andrássy1PERSON the following january , sultan abdülaziz agreed to reforms proposed by hungarian statesman julius andrássy , but the rebels , suspecting they might win their freedom , continued their uprising , joined by militants in serbia and bulgaria .
2238gains1PERSON derby dissolved parliament , and the ensuing general election resulted in modest tory gains , but not enough to control the commons .
2239middle east1PERSON he had rarely travelled abroad ; since his youthful tour of the middle east in 1830-1831 , he had left britain only for his honeymoon and three visits to paris , the last of which was in 1856 .
2240slaves1DEVICE disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
2241labouchere1UNKNOWN two men of victorian appearance opponents of disraeli : o' connell and labouchere in april 1835 , disraeli fought a by-election at taunton as a tory candidate .
2242lord barrington1PERSON almost blind , when he received the last letter from victoria of which he was aware on 5 april , he held it momentarily , then had it read to him by lord barrington , a privy councillor .
2243confirmation1ACTION in late february , with parliament in session and derby absent , he wrote to disraeli asking for confirmation that " you will not shrink from the additional heavy responsibility " .
2244world events1EVENT world events thereafter moved against the conservatives .
2245stanley disraeli1PERSON bright , peel , bentinck and stanley disraeli gradually became a sharp critic of peel 's government , often deliberately taking contrary positions .
2246part flattery1ACT disraeli 's biographer , adam kirsch , suggests that disraeli 's obsequious treatment of his queen was part flattery , part belief that this was how a queen should be addressed by a loyal subject , and part awe that a middle-class man of jewish birth should be the companion of a monarch .
2247islamism1CONCEPT hindutva * islamism *
2248reference1NUMBER disraeli 's public exchanges with o'connell , extensively reproduced in the times , included a demand for a duel with the 60-year-old o'connell 's son ( which resulted in disraeli 's temporary detention by the authorities ) , a reference to " the inextinguishable hatred with which shall pursue existence " , and the accusation that o'connell 's supporters had a " princely revenue wrung from a starving race of fanatical slaves " .
2249chamber1PERSON five days before the end of the 1876 session of parliament , on 11 august , disraeli was seen to linger and look around the chamber before departing .
2250polls1CONCLUSION in january 1874 , gladstone called a general election , convinced that if he waited longer , he would do worse at the polls .
2251liberal labour mp alexander macdonald1PERSON
2252amid british preparations1PERSON amid british preparations for war , the russians and turks agreed to discussions at berlin .
2253spears1ACTION as zulu troops could not marry until they had washed their spears in blood , they were eager for combat .
2254huge1UNKNOWN a young man with dark hair and huge sideburns lord robert cecil , disraeli 's fierce opponent in the 1860s , but later his ally and successor disraeli led a toothless opposition in the commons—seeing no way of unseating palmerston , derby privately agreed not to seek the government 's defeat .
2255gómez dávila1PERSON gómez dávila *
2256putin1UNKNOWN kaczyński * netanyahu * modi * putin * abe * bolsonaro * orbán * meloni religion *
2257lefebvre1PERSON burnham * lefebvre *
2258parody1EVENT disraeli continued to the last to pillory his enemies in barely disguised caricatures : the character st barbe in endymion is widely seen as a parody of thackeray , who had offended disraeli more than thirty years earlier by lampooning him in punch as " codlingsby " .
2259speeches1SPEECH disraeli took no public part in the electioneering , it being deemed improper for peers to make speeches to influence commons elections .
2260parentage1STATE disraeli , a baptised christian of jewish parentage , was already an mp , as the mandated oath of office presented no barrier to him .
2261gadamer1PERSON mannheim * jünger * evola * strauss * röpke * gadamer * freyre *
2262barrier1ACT disraeli , a baptised christian of jewish parentage , was already an mp , as the mandated oath of office presented no barrier to him .
2263culture1PERSON popular culture disraeli , the first person caricatured in the london magazine vanity fair , 30 january 1869 .
2264governments1GOVERNMENT when lord derby , the party leader , thrice formed governments in the 1850s and 1860s , disraeli served as chancellor of the exchequer and leader of the house of commons .
2265visitors1PERSON in later years , the german chancellor would show visitors to his office three pictures on the wall : " the portrait of my sovereign , there on the right that of my wife , and on the left , there , that of lord beaconsfield " .
2266arms1LANGUAGE arms caption : coat of arms of benjamin disraeli crest issuant from a wreath of oak proper a castle triple-towered argent .
2267regina et imperatrix1PERSON once the bill was formally enacted , victoria began signing her letters " victoria r & i " ( latin : regina et imperatrix , queen and empress ) .
2268masters1PERSON the house of lords , therefore , at this moment represents everything in the realm except the whig oligarchs , their tools the dissenters , and their masters the irish priests .
2269chartist movement1HUMAN GROUP he was a loyal supporter of the party leader sir robert peel and his policies , with the exception of a personal sympathy for the chartist movement that most tories did not share .
2270roll1PERSON the conservatives remained in office because the new electoral register was not yet ready ; neither party wished a poll under the old roll .
2271butler1PERSON baldwin * macmillan * butler * howard *
2272thames purification bill1PERSON the thames purification bill funded the construction of much larger sewers for london .
2273women disraeli1PERSON three portraits ; a man and two women disraeli 's father , mother and sister —
2274blank verse tragedy1SITUATION blake commented that disraeli " produced an epic poem , unbelievably bad , and a five-act blank verse tragedy , if possible worse .
2275isle1PLACE disraeli went to osborne house on the isle of wight , where the queen asked him to form a government .
2276oak1PERSON arms caption : coat of arms of benjamin disraeli crest issuant from a wreath of oak proper a castle triple-towered argent .
2277viceroy1PERSON the viceroy of india lord lytton concealed his plans to issue this ultimatum from disraeli , and when the prime minister insisted he take no action , went ahead anyway .
2278catholic churches1PERSON lothair was " disraeli 's ideological pilgrim 's progress " , it tells a story of political life with particular regard to the roles of the anglican and roman catholic churches .
2279marcos1PERSON pinochet * marcos * park * smith *
2280importation1PERSON the sale of food and drugs act 1875 prohibited the mixing of injurious ingredients with articles of food or with drugs , and provision was made for the appointment of analysts ; all tea " had to be examined by a customs official on importation , and when in the opinion of the analyst it was unfit for food , the tea had to be destroyed " .
2281blame1PERSON final months , death , and memorials disraeli refused to cast blame for the defeat , which he understood was likely to be final for him .
2282vacant1UNKNOWN when the position of archbishop of canterbury fell vacant , disraeli reluctantly agreed to the queen 's preferred candidate , archibald tait , the bishop of london .
2283pall mall gazette1PERSON on 14 november 1875 , the editor of the pall mall gazette , frederick greenwood , learned from london banker henry oppenheim that the khedive was seeking to sell his shares in the suez canal company to a french firm .
2284sir david salomons1PERSON the first jewish lord mayor of london , sir david salomons , was elected in 1855 , followed by the 1858 emancipation of the jews .
2285manuscript1EVENT he had made a tentative start : in may 1824 he submitted a manuscript to his father 's friend , the publisher john murray , but withdrew it before murray could decide whether to publish it .
2286animosity1PROPERTY disraeli wrote a personal letter to gladstone , asking him to place the good of the party above personal animosity : " every man performs his office , and there is a power , greater than ourselves , that disposes of all this . "
2287guatemala1PLACE france * germany * greece * guatemala *
2288earldom1UNKNOWN in addition to the viscounty bestowed on mary anne disraeli , the earldom of beaconsfield was to have been bestowed on edmund burke in 1797 , but he had died before receiving it .
2289targets1EVENT his targets included the whigs , collectively and individually , irish nationalists , and political corruption .
2290defences1PERSON to make his budget revenue-neutral , as funds were needed to provide defences against the french , he doubled the house tax and continued the income tax .
2291lawyers1PERSON the tragedy of count alarcos ( 1839 ) non-fiction * an inquiry into the plans , progress , and policy of the american mining companies ( 1825 ) * lawyers and legislators : or , notes , on the american mining companies ( 1825 ) *

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coalitions
control
couple
crowd
crowds
governing coalition
group
invasion
invasions
margin
meritocracy
minority
occupation
protest
rivals
socialism
soldiers
tory reform group
young england group
ABSTRACT ENTITY
approval
balmoral
base
cancer
coat
construction
converts
depiction
depictions
diary
edition
evils
example
go between
kind
low
memoirs
memory
proposal
prose
vindication
AMOUNT
accusation
advancement
breaches
charge
depth
discharge
exchequer
extravagances
grain prices
ground
grounds
handling
leader in waiting
notice
prices
purchase
reform
salary
task
thoughts
volumes
CONDITION
advantage
arms caption
asthma
birth
combat
condition
consumption
dark
dissension
dissensions
executions
gout
grief
ignorance
improprieties
infirmities
pains
schemes
stability
victories
INSTITUTION
british east india company
carlton club
civil service
east india company
exclusively tory carlton club
firm
institutions
melbourne ministry
ministry
oxford
press
school
second disraeli ministry
service
society
suez canal company
tutor
university
whig ministry
winchester college
STATEMENT
acclaim
commonplace
exception
fiction
memorial
non fiction
platitudes
plea
proportion
re telling
return
returns
risk
rumours
statement
statements
widespread acclaim
PROPERTY
age
agitation
animosity
delicate health
health
jewishness
maidstone seat
majority
property
public health
reading
seat
seats
stances
traditionalist catholicism
unpopularity
HUMAN GROUP
army
bentinck family
chartist movement
committee
council
family
federation
movement
ottoman army
parliament
people
state people
troops
vote british people
zulu troops
RESULT
basis
contrast
date
dependent
election results
exchange
exchanges
portrayal
portrayals
promotion
result
results
sale
sixth
stock exchange
NUMBER
board
bumper crops
career
careers
chambers
crops
guard
itv series number
number
oration
parliamentary career
reference
rest
videos video
weather
POWER
british power
by election
by elections
commons elections
december general election
election
elections
general election
influence
motives
power
powers
re election
world power
ENTITY
ambassador
back benches
bench
book
books
british ambassador
congregation
existence
front bench
opposition benches
provinces
sides
thing
towns
FORCE
character
characters
climb
conservative party
force
liberal party
mines
party
rebellion
rebellions
security
struggles
INSTANCE
aspect
aspects
commission
consolation
emoluments
families
reshuffle
spirituality
tolls
whigs bawl
white terror
QUANTITY
aid
custom
discourse
faults
financing
funds
grain
mass
pillow
seas
vacancy
SET
aristocracy
cities
connections
dress
mores
nationalism
personality
protocol
scene
sephardi aristocracy
trilogy
ACTIVITY
bursting
congress
electioneering
everything
feelings
labour party meetings
meeting
slump
synagogue
work
ARTICLE
articles
berlin main article
chancellor main article
derby government main article
election main article
exchequer first derby government main article
journal article
royal titles act main article
term main articles
zululand main articles
GOVERNMENT
aberdeen government
british government
derby government
disraeli government
government
governments
independent governments
inn
minority government
staff
DEVICE
clergyman
clergymen
device
dizzy
guns
nomination
satire
satires
slaves
ELEMENT
attention
cautions
cure
descendants
elements
interest
interests
link
self interest
ABILITY
ability
absolutism
conservatism variants
imagination
note
poetry
subject
traditionalist school personal variants
ziaism national variants
PROCESS
accent
authorship
decay
degree
education
losing
negotiation
negotiations
schooling
POSITION
misgivings
position
positions
premiership
premierships
sinecure
trip
viewpoint
HUMAN ROLE
british prime minister
december prime minister
february prime minister
june prime minister
lord mayor
minister
portrait prime minister
prime minister
ARTIFACT
builder
flowers
francs
output
peace treaty
protectionist features
root
treaty
ATTITUDE
attitude
attitudes
black conservatism
conservatism
duties
duty
lgbt conservatism
DECISION
advice
appointment
appointments
decision
decisions
recovery
voice
RULE
criteria
dogma
policies
policy
relativism
rule
subsidiarity
AGREEMENT
agreement
concert
exposition
loans
party truce
themes
COLLECTION
account
bestseller
democrat myth
miles
peerage
primacy
QUALITY
chances
democracy
fondness
qualities
selfishness
turpitude
PURPOSE
acceptance
letter
letters
meaning
partisan significance
purpose
EMOTION
affection
confidence
fear
sexuality
sickness
tension
MONEY
debts
money
mud
princely revenue
propagation
taxation
PERMISSION
borough franchises
concessions
franchise
reinforcements
short
version
UNIT
detachment
family history
history
register
voting register
TRUST
belief
beliefs
elitism
opinion
part belief
RANK
promoter
rank
ranks
source
stewardship
TERM
officers
superior officer
term
terms
unification
SITUATION
blank verse tragedy
deal
perils
situation
tragedy
WORD
ancestors
garter
tribes
word
words
STATUS
authorities
authority
capacity
status
synagogue authorities
EFFECT
effect
effects
experience
experiences
test
SPEECH ACT
commentary
conversion
message
print
sketches
FORM
form
intellect
match
revenge
survival
QUESTION
eastern question
question
questions
schleswig holstein question
BODY
body
defeat
liberalism
wreath
TENDENCY
fashion
ingredients
sort
suit
ROLE
gender roles
governing role
role
roles
DOCUMENT
mighty prototype
property qualification
title page
transit
STUDY
agriculture
cases
climate
study
GARMENT
balance
impressions
order
overall
LANGUAGE
arms
language
liking
spells
NAME
name
names
pen name
steps
STYLE
copy
model
style
tradition
INFORMATION
background
bulletins
information
mercantile background
SOUND
alt
discord
distinction
uproar
RESOURCE
detention
doctors
plots
wall
FOOD
bismarck
dinner
food
word spread
VALUE
future
sensibility
value
values
CAUSE
cause
reproach
sacrament
CONCLUSION
polls
sight
suffrage
SPEECH
memorial speech
speech
speeches
RELATIONSHIP
friendship
rapport
relationship
TOOL
rescue
tools
trowel
SEQUENCE
biography
colonies
post
PART
chancellor—in part
politics nearer
works part
OCCURRENCE
access
earthquakes
production
SUBSTANCE
clouds
foundation
transaction
PORTION
face
reverse
surname
INCREASE
growth
increase
rallies
DISPUTE
dispute
quarrel
trade dispute
USE
use
uses
COGNITIVE STATE
insight
theory
DISTANCE
endurance
prominence
SYSTEM
protectionism
system
PICTURE
picture
pictures
FIGURE
figure
figures
LIGHT
sabres
wheat
DISEASE
disease
income
OPPORTUNITY
approach
opportunity
BALL
field
fields
MEASURE
measure
measures
TREATMENT
paternalism
treatment
REQUEST
motion
request
IMAGE
image
portraits
ASSET
asset
oath
SUGGESTION
recommendation
suggestion
SYMBOL
press reports
reports
LIQUID
whig
whigs
SERIES
outstanding limited series
series
SKILL
skill
statesmanship
DOCUMENT PART
budget
conspiracy
HEAD
head
wig
DEFICIENCY
disarray
great famine
TECHNIQUE
techniques
PARTICLE
range
TIME PERIOD
anniversary
LAND
domain
ILLNESS
illness
ROOM
rooms
ESTATE
boroughs
PHRASE
phrase
DISCIPLINE
discipline
WATER
waters
ANYTHING
anything
OFFER
offer
WOOD
sir charles wood
HILL
higham hill
ORGANISATION
mark
PROPOSITION
parallel
ABSENCE
absence
NATURE
nature
METAL
followers
STAGE
stage
ACQUISITION
housing
FIRE
fire
WAVE
wave
ARTWORK
film
SIMILARITY
correspondence
LOCATION
works list
RELATION
relations
HAIR
hair
RACE
race
BRANCH
diplomacy
RESPONSIBILITY
responsibility
COMMITMENT
commitment
SHIP
ships
ENERGY
energy
PLANT
primroses
BOMB
bomb
AIR
air
FOOT
feet
GAME
scène de triomphe
BEVERAGE
malt
TRAIN
train
DRUG
drugs
HORSE
fork
ARRANGEMENT
arrangement
SUCCESSION
succession
REPUTATION
reputation
SPACE
chancel