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・ John Spencer (died 1522)
・ John Spencer (died 1600)
・ John Spencer (footballer, born 1898)
・ John Spencer (footballer, born 1934)
・ John Spencer (Lord Mayor of London)
・ John Spencer (Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge)
・ John Spencer (politician)
・ John Spencer (rugby union)
・ John Spencer (rugby)
・ John Spencer (Scottish footballer)
・ John Spencer (sheriff)
・ John Spencer (snooker player)
・ John Spencer Bassett
・ John Spencer Hardy
・ John Spencer Letts
John Spencer Smith
・ John Spencer Stanhope
・ John Spencer, 1st Earl Spencer
・ John Spencer, 5th Earl Spencer
・ John Spencer, 8th Earl Spencer
・ John Spencer, Viscount Althorp
・ John Spencer-Churchill
・ John Spencer-Churchill (artist)
・ John Spencer-Churchill, 10th Duke of Marlborough
・ John Spencer-Churchill, 11th Duke of Marlborough
・ John Spencer-Churchill, 7th Duke of Marlborough
・ John Spender
・ John Spendluffe Technology College
・ John Spenkelink
・ John Spens, Lord Condie


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John Spencer Smith : ウィキペディア英語版
John Spencer Smith

John Spencer Smith FRS (1 September 1769 – 5 June 1845) was a British diplomat, politician and writer.
==Career==
Smith joined the British Army in 1790 as an ensign,〔(The London Gazette, 6 July 1790 )〕 later promoted to lieutenant. When France declared war on Britain in February 1793 he was in Turkey with his elder brother, Sidney Smith, who obtained a position for him in the British embassy in Constantinople. He was private secretary to the ambassador, Robert Liston, and was chargé d'affaires after Liston left Constantinople in November 1795. He was formally appointed Secretary of Legation in 1798 and continued to serve as chargé d'affaires ''ad interim''.〔S.T. Bindoff, E.F. Malcolm Smith and C.K. Webster, ''British Diplomatic Representatives 1789-1852'' (Royal Historical Society, 1934), page 165〕
Smith left Constantinople in 1801 and arrived in England just in time to be invited to stand for Parliament for the borough of Dover in the United Kingdom general election of 1802. While he was a member of parliament he was sent on a mission as Envoy Extraordinary to Württemberg in 1803–04.〔(The London Gazette, 21 June 1803 )〕〔S.T. Bindoff, E.F. Malcolm Smith and C.K. Webster, ''British Diplomatic Representatives 1789-1852'' (Royal Historical Society, 1934), page 194〕 This mission was interpreted by the French as espionage and used to justify the kidnap of Sir George Rumbold at Hamburg.〔(Arrest Of Sir George Rumbold ) ''The Times'', London, 16 November 1804, page 2〕
Smith withdrew from Dover at the general election of 1806 and soon afterwards settled in Normandy where he wrote on a variety of scholarly subjects. He died at Caen on 5 June 1845.

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