Melchior Guy Dickens

Lieutenant-Colonel Melchior Guy Dickens (bapt. 18 February 1696; died 1775) was a British diplomat, minister to Prussia and Sweden and ambassador to Russia.[1]

Melchior Guy Dickens was educated at Westminster School.[2] From 1724 to 1730 he was Secretary at the British embassy to Prussia at Berlin;[3] officially appointed Secretary to the Prussian Court in 1730,[4] he seems to have acted as chargé d'affaires there until 1740.[3] In August 1732 he was briefly at Hanover.[5] In 1740 he was promoted to be minister. He left Prussia in May 1741.[3] In June 1742 he arrived in Stockholm as Minister to the Swedish Court.[6] In 1749 he became ambassador to Russia.[7]

References

  1. Gale (1932), "Colonel Melchior Guy Dickens", Notes and Queries, 162: 75–77
  2. The record of old Westminsters, p. 266
  3. 1 2 3 Ragnhild Marie Hatton et al., eds., Royal and republican sovereignty in early modern Europe, p. 505
  4. London Gazette, 6910, 18 August 1730
  5. London Gazette, 7117, 12 August 1732
  6. London Gazette, 8131, 26 June 1742
  7. London Gazette, 8867, 15 July 1749; 8924, 30 January 1749

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.