Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
| Periods in Office: | February, 1868 - December, 1868 February, 1874 - April, 1880 |
| PM Predecessors: | The Earl of Derby William Ewart Gladstone |
| PM Successor: | William Ewart Gladstone |
| Date of Birth: | 21 December 1804 |
| Place of Birth: | London |
| Political Party: | Conservative |
He was Britain's first, and thus far only, Jewish Prime Minister. He was born to a Jewish family and baptized a Christian, but nevertheless continued to think of himself a Jew. Officially, he was a member of the Church of England, as members of other faiths were not allowed to sit in the House of Commons. His Jewishness was an open secret however. He was once attacked for being Jewish by the Irish nationalist politician Daniel O'Connell, to whom he replied:
- "Yes, I am a Jew and when the ancestors of the right honourable gentleman were brutal savages in an unknown island, mine were priests in the temple of Solomon."
Having been lionized as a writer of romantic fiction long before he entered politics, Disraeli continued for a time to dress as extravagantly in the House of Commons as he had before. In Parliament, Disraeli became known for his defense of the Corn Laws, in opposition to fellow Tory Sir Robert Peel's advocacy to repeal the laws, which Disraeli denounced as "laissez-faire capitalism".
Disraeli would lose the fight -- the repeal of the Corn Laws came at great political cost to the split Tory party. But Peel's betrayal of conservative ideology would cost him the ministry, and Disraeli would rise to fill the leadership void Peel's fall left in the Tory party.
In 1852 Lord Derby appointed Disraeli Chancellor of the Exchequer in the (in)famous Who? Who? Ministry. Disraeli's duel with William Gladstone over the Budget marked the beginning of thirty years of parliamentary hostility. Disraeli served as Chancellor of the Exchequer in the 1858 and 1867-68 Tory governments. He supported the Reform Act of 1867, which enfranchised every adult male householder; before this legislation, a tiny proportion of the population was entitled to vote. In 1868 he became Prime Minister, but only briefly; he became Prime Minister again in 1874. In 1876 he was made Earl of Beaconsfield by Queen Victoria.
Although he had had several notorious affairs, in his youth, he was ostentatiously faithful and attentive to his wife: Disraeli married, in 1839, the widow of his political colleague. Mary Anne Lewis was some twelve years older than he and a self-proclaimed flibbertigibbet.
Known to his friends as Dizzy, Disraeli himself had a fine, if wry, sense of humor and enjoyed the ambiguities of the English language. When an aspiring writer would send Disraeli an uninteresting manuscript to review, he liked to reply, "Dear Sir: I thank you for sending me a copy of your book, which I shall waste no time in reading." Disraeli's own novels have fallen out of literary fashion, but even those he came to regard as youthful follies are witty, racy chronicles of the age, and the mature works Coningsby (1844), Sybil (1845) and Tancred (1847) also contain an entertaining exposition in fiction of Disraeli's political philosophy.
Lord Beaconsfield is buried in Hughenden, Buckinghamshire. The anniversary of his death on 19 April is known as Primrose Day.
Benjamin Disraeli's First Government, February - December 1868
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Benjamin Disraeli's (Earl of Beaconsfield's) Second Government, February 1874 - April 1880
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Fiction
Biographies of Beaconsfield
Films about Beaconsfield
Quotes
External links
| Preceded by: New Creation | Earl of Beaconsfield | Followed by: Extinct |
