Wikidata Ioannes Major
Res apud Vicidata repertae:
Ioannes Major: imago
Nativitas: 29 Martii 1943; Londinium
Patria: Britanniarum Regnum

Officium

Officium: Primus minister, Leader of the Opposition, Leader of the Conservative Party, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Shadow Foreign Secretary, First Lord of the Treasury, Minister for the Civil Service, Member of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom, member of the 52nd Parliament of the United Kingdom, member of the 51st Parliament of the United Kingdom, member of the 50th Parliament of the United Kingdom, member of the 49th Parliament of the United Kingdom, member of the 48th Parliament of the United Kingdom, Shadow Secretary of State for Defence
Munus: politicus, bank manager, autobiographus, Argentarius

Consociatio

Familia

Genitores: Tom Major-Ball; Gwendolyn Minny Coates
Coniunx: Norma Major
Proles: Elizabeth Major, James Major

Memoria

Laurae: Knight of the Garter, British Sports Book Awards

Ioannes Major (Anglice: John Major; natus die 29 Martii 1943) est vir publicus Angliae. Fuit dux Factionis Conservativae et ab anno 1990 usque ad annum 1997 primus minister Britanniarum Regni, antea fuerat inter alia cancellarius scaccarii id est aerarii minister accurate a die 26 Octobris 1989 usque ad diem 28 Novembris 1990. A die 3 Maii 1979 usque ad diem 7 Iunii 2001 Major in Parlamento Britannico munere populi Huntingdon functus est.

Ioannes Major

BibliographiaRecensere

  • Edmund Dell, The Chancellors: a history of the chancellors of the exchequer, 1945-1990. Londinii: Harper Collins, 1996. ISBN 0-00-255558-1
  • Sarah Hogg, Jonathan Hill, Too Close To Call: power and politics: John Major in No. 10. Londinii: Little, Brown, 1995. ISBN 0-316-87716-6
  • Anthony Seldon, Lewis Baston, Major: a political life. Londinii: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1997. ISBN 0-297-81607-1

Nexus externusRecensere

  Haec stipula ad biographiam spectat. Amplifica, si potes!
Consilium ministrorum Margaritae Thatcher 1979–1990