49:
319:
364:
505:
388:
testing the diplomatic waters before committing himself publicly to an opinion. She could not cure his notorious lack of punctuality since this was a fault she shared to the full; Queen
Victoria, while staying with them at Broadlands, complained that Emily had kept her waiting for an hour for a carriage ride. It was a standing joke in London society that they were always so late for dinner that neither of them had ever heard of soup. Psychologically the two were very well-matched. Biographer Herbert Bell states:
274:
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personal security he needed to get to the very top of
British politics. Lady Palmerston made her husband happy, as he did her, and she was a political power in her own right. In the last and most successful decades of Palmerston’s life, she was his best advisor and most trusted amanuensis. Theirs was one of the great marriages of the century.
247:. Due to her mother's numerous love affairs, her true paternity was never verified, and has been described as being "shrouded in mystery". The Lamb family had been politically prominent since the mid-18th century, reaching their zenith of influence in Emily's generation. Her father was made Viscount Melbourne in 1781. Her eldest brother
392:
If
Palmerston brought the greater sum of knowledge and pure intellect to the partnership, his lady was richly dowered in other qualities: sound sense and delicate sensibilities, warmed by beauty and good-heartedness into charm; shrewdness, so linked with impulsiveness that one wonders still how far
306:
Emily was noted not only for beauty but for her extraordinary charm: she was described as "grace put in action, whose softness was as seductive as her joyousness". She was undoubtedly the most popular patroness of Almack's, her warmth and charm being a notable contrast to the rudeness and arrogance
290:
Aged eighteen, Emily married Peter
Clavering-Cowper, 5th Earl Cowper (1778–1837), who was nine years her senior. Lord Cowper had a reputation for dullness and slowness of speech which were in marked contrast to his wife's social gifts; a more favourable opinion was that he was a quiet, pleasant man
298:
She was noted for kindness and generosity, and would do anything for a person she liked. She would even help people she disliked: although she detested her sister-in-law
Caroline, when Caroline was barred from Almack's, a sign of the deepest social disgrace, Emily eventually managed to get the ban
383:
said, "His attentions to Lady
Palmerston, when they both of them were well stricken in years, were those of a perpetual courtship. The sentiment was reciprocal; and I have frequently seen them go out on a morning to plant some trees, almost believing that they would live to eat the fruit, or sit
371:
In 1837, Lord Cowper died, two days into the reign of Queen
Victoria. This left the way open for a marriage between Emily and Palmerston, though their age was a cause for concern, as, in the eyes of her family, was Palmerston's reputation as a womaniser. The matter was referred to Queen Victoria,
387:
During the marriage, Lady
Palmerston continued an active social role as a salon hostess. As the events were eagerly attended by foreign diplomats, Lord Palmerston would encourage his wife to float his ideas before the assembled guests and report back on their reception as a means of unofficially
405:
was an inspired political alliance as well as a stab at personal happiness. Harry and Emily were supremely well-matched. As the husband of a beautiful, charming, intelligent, rich woman whose friends were the best people in society, Palmerston at last had the money, the social setting, and the
423:
She had five children, three sons and two daughters, all born during her marriage to Lord Cowper, although one of the daughters, Emily, was believed to have been fathered by
Palmerston, and her son William may have been fathered by Pozzo di Borgo.
343:. Palmerston was a regular fixture of her parties and salons, and as Lord Cowper sank into a long period of ill health and general decline, Lady Cowper and Lord Palmerston entered into a romantic relationship. This brought Palmerston, originally a
745:
291:
who was far less stupid than he appeared to be, but preferred to avoid society and politics. Emily threw herself into the
Regency social scene, becoming one of the patronesses of the highly exclusive
738:
519:(Quarterly, 1st and 4th, Or an Eagle displayed Sable (Earl of Mercia); 2nd and 3rd, Argent two bars Sable each charged with three Martlets Or (Temple)) impaling the arms of
731:
355:
candidate. Emily's mother on her deathbed in 1818 urged her to remain constant to Palmerston, possibly looking forward to a future time when they would be free to marry.
351:, Palmerston said, "the Whigs supported me most handsomely, and were indeed my chief and most active friends". Soon after, Palmerston switched affiliations and ran as a
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92:
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335:, who was known as "Cupid" at the time for his various romantic dalliances, including affairs with Emily's fellow patronesses of Almack's,
164:
266:
There was a lifelong bond between William and Emily, whom he fondly called "that little devil Emily"; by contrast she detested his wife,
785:
883:
810:
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332:
228:
133:
459:
863:
48:
825:
252:
873:
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830:
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259:, was a minor playwright and journalist of the era. The Lambs were closely linked with the Whig party, and were intimates of
244:
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whose approval cleared the way for the marriage on 16 December 1839. Palmerston was 55 at the time, and Lady Cowper was 52.
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The Honorable Charles Spencer Cowper (7 June 1816 – 30 March 1879), he married Lady Harriett Gardiner (daughter of
432:
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lifted. Like many of the society ladies of the age, she had love affairs, including one with the Corsican diplomat
1137:
428:
352:
160:
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466:(died Aug 1852). They had one daughter. He remarried to Jessie McLean on 11 April 1871. He inherited
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her ‘indiscretions’ were planned for effect; earnestness and enthusiasm that admit of no such doubt.
347:, increasingly in contact with notable Whigs, particularly Emily's brother. Of an 1826 proposal for
888:
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451:(13 December 1811 – 17 October 1888), he married Harriet Gurney on 27 June 1843. He remarried
431:(26 June 1806 – 15 April 1856), he married Anne Florence Weddell, Baroness Lucas (daughter of
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780:
626:
348:
1162:
1092:
1087:
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Dexter a Lion regardant Pean; Sinister a Horse regardant Argent maned tailed and hoofed Or.
504:
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In 1865, Lord Palmerston died, and Lady Palmerston followed him four years later, in 1869.
36:
8:
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523:(Sable on a Fess Erminois between three Cinquefoils Argent two Mullets of the Field.)
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and the union was, by all accounts, a decidedly happy one. Of it,
331:
At Almack's, Lady Cowper was increasingly seen in the company of
251:
twice held the premiership of England, while another brother,
470:
in 1843 and sold it to Queen Victoria's eldest son and heir,
344:
307:
of some of the other ladies who ran the club, especially
498:
Coat of arms of Emily Temple as Viscountess Palmerston
753:
715:
We Two: Victoria and Albert: Rulers, Partners, Rivals
679:Famous English Statesmen of Queen Victoria's Reign
625:. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. pp.
618:
560:
227:, and subsequently wife of another Prime Minister
93:Spouse of the prime minister of the United Kingdom
1143:Spouses of prime ministers of the United Kingdom
1079:
215:from 1805 to 1839, was a leading figure of the
460:Charles John Gardiner, 1st Earl of Blessington
443:Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury
739:
449:William Cowper-Temple, 1st Baron Mount Temple
326:
303:, later Russian Ambassador to Great Britain.
169:William Cowper-Temple, 1st Baron Mount Temple
53:Portrait of Lady Emily Lamb, aged 16, by Sir
681:. Boston: C.J. Peter's and Sons. p. 85.
435:) on 7 October 1833. They had six children.
277:Portrait of Emily Lamb, Countess Cowper by
1158:Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
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732:
517:Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
503:
333:Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
47:
358:
567:. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. p.
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488:on 9 April 1841. They had five children.
462:) on 1 September 1852, she was widow of
362:
317:
272:
445:on 10 June 1830. They had ten children.
270:(whom she called "the little beast").
148: 1839; died 1865)
123: 1805; died 1837)
14:
1080:
676:
441:(1810 – 15 October 1872), she married
727:
616:
521:Peniston Lamb, 1st Viscount Melbourne
255:, was a noted diplomat, and a third,
219:social set, sister of Prime Minister
185:Peniston Lamb, 1st Viscount Melbourne
480:(1820 – 26 March 1880), she married
478:Frances Jocelyn, Viscountess Jocelyn
197:Emily Temple, Viscountess Palmerston
175:Frances Jocelyn, Viscountess Jocelyn
24:
755:Spouses of British prime ministers
341:Sarah Villiers, Countess of Jersey
234:
25:
1174:
486:Robert Jocelyn, 3rd Earl of Roden
285:
1062:
1061:
1052:
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482:Robert Jocelyn, Viscount Jocelyn
707:
694:
685:
621:The Dandy: Brummell to Beerbohm
145:
120:
670:
661:
652:
643:
610:
597:
588:
575:
549:
429:George Cowper, 6th Earl Cowper
161:George Cowper, 6th Earl Cowper
13:
1:
542:
27:British countess; (1787–1869)
929:Charlotte Campbell-Bannerman
607:Constable London 1970, p. 43
84:1869 (aged 81–82)
7:
1103:19th-century British people
1098:18th-century British people
667:Quoted in Guedalla, 118–119
384:together under the shade."
301:Carlo Andrea Pozzo di Borgo
10:
1179:
1113:19th-century British women
1108:18th-century British women
375:They set up their home at
327:The affair with Palmerston
239:Emily was born in 1787 to
41:The Viscountess Palmerston
1047:
839:
761:
209:The Honourable Emily Lamb
180:
156:
99:
88:
80:
61:
46:
34:
1148:Women of the Regency era
537:
418:
410:
245:Elizabeth (née Milbanke)
924:Georgina Gascoyne-Cecil
492:
367:Lady Palmerston in 1860
1138:Daughters of viscounts
974:Elizabeth Douglas-Home
677:Bolton, Sarah (1891).
368:
359:Marriage to Palmerston
323:
282:
211:from 1787 to 1805 and
110:Peter Clavering-Cowper
939:Margaret Lloyd George
801:Mary Watson-Wentworth
786:Harriet Pelham-Holles
617:Moers, Ellen (1960).
585:Pan Edition 1965 p.69
563:Palmerston: 1784–1865
401:states the marriage:
366:
349:Catholic Emancipation
321:
276:
207:; 1787–1869), styled
954:Clementine Churchill
700:Herbert C. F. Bell,
484:, the eldest son of
464:Alfred Comte d'Orsay
455:on 22 November 1848.
37:The Right Honourable
1133:Irish viscountesses
919:Catherine Gladstone
884:Catherine Wellesley
796:Elizabeth Grenville
691:Bolton, pages 86–87
499:
453:Georgina Tollemache
1123:British countesses
1118:British socialites
914:Mary Anne Disraeli
904:Emma Smith-Stanley
497:
369:
324:
283:
268:Lady Caroline Lamb
223:, wife of the 5th
189:Elizabeth Milbanke
95:(1855–58; 1859–65)
1075:
1074:
969:Dorothy Macmillan
816:Elizabeth FitzRoy
771:Catherine Walpole
535:
534:
468:Sandringham House
439:Lady Emily Cowper
194:
193:
165:Lady Emily Cowper
134:Henry John Temple
16:(Redirected from
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1153:Wives of knights
1065:
1064:
1055:
1054:
1039:Victoria Starmer
1009:Samantha Cameron
984:Audrey Callaghan
949:Anne Chamberlain
864:Louisa Jenkinson
849:Ursula Addington
831:Dorothy Bentinck
781:Catherine Pelham
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553:
507:
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381:Lord Shaftesbury
205:Clavering-Cowper
149:
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32:
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899:Frances Russell
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717:(2008) p. 263.
712:
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702:Lord Palmerston
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605:Lord Palmerston
603:Ridley, Jasper
602:
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554:
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421:
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337:Dorothea Lieven
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313:Princess Lieven
288:
237:
235:The Lamb family
229:Lord Palmerston
213:Countess Cowper
187:
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55:Thomas Lawrence
42:
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12:
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1024:Carrie Johnson
1021:
1019:Marina Wheeler
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989:Denis Thatcher
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934:Margot Asquith
931:
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879:Sarah Robinson
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869:Mary Jenkinson
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854:Anne Grenville
851:
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841:United Kingdom
837:
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286:First marriage
284:
261:Queen Victoria
253:Frederick Lamb
243:and his wife,
236:
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221:Lord Melbourne
192:
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182:
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172:Charles Cowper
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89:Known for
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1128:Cowper family
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1034:Akshata Murty
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859:Jane Perceval
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763:Great Britain
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749:
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710:
704:(1936) 1:259.
703:
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638:
636:0-8032-8101-3
632:
628:
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584:
581:Cecil, David
578:
570:
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558:
552:
548:
528:
525:
522:
518:
514:
511:
510:
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483:
479:
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472:Albert Edward
469:
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296:
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293:Almack's club
280:
275:
271:
269:
264:
262:
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254:
250:
246:
242:
241:Peniston Lamb
232:
230:
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50:
45:
38:
33:
30:
19:
1057:Category:GBR
1029:Hugh O'Leary
999:Cherie Blair
944:Lucy Baldwin
909:Emily Temple
908:
874:Joan Canning
826:Louisa Petty
811:Anne FitzRoy
714:
709:
701:
696:
687:
678:
672:
663:
654:
649:Ridley p. 48
645:
620:
612:
604:
599:
590:
582:
577:
562:
551:
515:The arms of
422:
414:
399:Gillian Gill
396:
386:
374:
370:
330:
305:
297:
289:
279:William Owen
265:
249:William Lamb
238:
212:
208:
204:
200:
196:
195:
29:
1163:Lamb family
1093:1869 deaths
1088:1787 births
1067:Category:UK
1004:Sarah Brown
994:Norma Major
979:Mary Wilson
806:Hester Pitt
791:Mary Stuart
397:Biographer
322:Lord Cowper
309:Lady Jersey
257:George Lamb
225:Earl Cowper
1082:Categories
1014:Philip May
894:Julia Peel
821:Anne North
543:References
526:Supporters
512:Escutcheon
474:, in 1862.
377:Broadlands
281:, ca. 1810
66:Emily Lamb
18:Emily Lamb
889:Mary Grey
583:Melbourne
181:Parent(s)
559:(1927).
217:Almack's
203:, later
157:Children
150:
142:
138:
125:
117:
113:
100:Spouses
71: (
633:
433:Thomas
627:43–45
538:Notes
419:Issue
411:Death
199:(née
144:(
140:
119:(
115:
631:ISBN
493:Arms
353:Whig
345:Tory
339:and
311:and
201:Lamb
81:Died
73:1787
69:1787
62:Born
569:233
295:.
263:.
1084::
629:.
315:.
231:.
146:m.
121:m.
747:e
740:t
733:v
639:.
571:.
75:)
20:)
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