¿Quién se casó con Marion Stein?

  • George Lascelles se casó con Marion Stein el . Marion Stein tenía 22 años el día de la boda (22 años, 11 meses y 11 días). George Lascelles tenía 26 años el día de la boda (26 años, 7 meses y 22 días). La diferencia de edad fue de 3 años, 8 meses y 11 días.

    El matrimonio duró 17 años, 6 meses y 8 días (6398 días). El matrimonio terminó el . Causa: divorcio

  • Jeremy Thorpe se casó con Marion Stein el . Marion Stein tenía 46 años el día de la boda (46 años, 4 meses y 24 días). Jeremy Thorpe tenía 43 años el día de la boda (43 años, 10 meses y 14 días). La diferencia de edad fue de 2 años, 6 meses y 11 días.

    El matrimonio duró 40 años, 11 meses y 20 días (14967 días). El matrimonio terminó el . Causa: muerte del cónyuge

Marion Stein: Cronología del estado civil

Marion Stein

Marion Stein

Maria Donata Nanetta Paulina Gustava Erwina Wilhelmine Stein, CBE (18 de octubre de 1926-6 de marzo de 2014), conocida como Marion Stein, y estilizada por matrimonio como Marion Lascelles, condesa de Harewood, y luego Marion Thorpe, fue una pianista austro-británica.​

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Wedding Rings

George Lascelles

George Henry Hubert Lascelles KBE, VII conde de Harewood (Londres, 7 de febrero de 1923-Casa Harewood, Reino Unido, 11 de julio de 2011) fue un melómano y promotor de ópera, empresario, crítico, escritor y filántropo británico.

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Marion Stein

Marion Stein
 
Wedding Rings

Jeremy Thorpe

John Jeremy Thorpe (29 April 1929 – 4 December 2014) was a British politician who was Member of Parliament (MP) for North Devon from 1959 to 1979 and Leader of the Liberal Party from 1967 to 1976. In May 1979 he was tried at the Old Bailey on charges of conspiracy and incitement to murder his former boyfriend, Norman Scott. Thorpe was acquitted on all charges, but the case, and the scandal surrounding it, ended his political career.

Thorpe was the son and grandson of Conservative MPs, but decided to align with the small and ailing Liberal Party. After studying Law at the University of Oxford, he became one of the Liberals' brightest stars in the 1950s. He entered Parliament at the age of 30, rapidly made his mark, and was elected party leader in 1967. After an uncertain start during which the party lost ground, Thorpe capitalised on the growing unpopularity of the Conservative and Labour parties to lead the Liberals through a period of electoral success. This culminated in the general election of February 1974, when the Liberals won 6 million votes out of some 31 million cast. Under the first-past-the-post electoral system, this gave them only 14 seats, but in a hung parliament, no party having an overall majority, Thorpe was in a strong position. He was offered a cabinet post by the Conservative prime minister, Edward Heath, if he would bring the Liberals into a coalition government. His price for such a deal, reform of the electoral system, was rejected by Heath, who resigned in favour of a minority Labour government.

The February 1974 election was the high-water mark of Thorpe's career. Thereafter his and his party's fortunes declined, particularly from late 1975 when rumours of his involvement in a plot to murder Norman Scott began to multiply. Thorpe resigned the leadership in May 1976 when his position became untenable. When the matter came to court three years later, Thorpe chose not to give evidence to avoid being cross-examined by counsel for the prosecution. This left many questions unanswered; despite his acquittal, Thorpe was discredited and did not return to public life. From the mid-1980s he was disabled by Parkinson's disease. During his long retirement he gradually recovered the affections of his party, and by the time of his death was honoured by a later generation of leaders, who drew attention to his record as an internationalist, a supporter of human rights and an opponent of apartheid and all forms of racism.

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Lugar de la Boda

Paddington, Ciudad de Westminster, Reino Unido