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Mary Montagu, Duchess of Montagu : ウィキペディア英語版
John Montagu, 2nd Duke of Montagu

John Montagu, 2nd Duke of Montagu, (1690 – 5 July 1749), styled Viscount Monthermer until 1705 and Marquess of Monthermer between 1705 and 1709, was a British peer.
==Life==
He was a son of Ralph Montagu, 1st Duke of Montagu and his first wife Elizabeth Wriothesley. His maternal grandparents were Thomas Wriothesley, 4th Earl of Southampton and Lady Elizabeth Leigh.
He went on the grand tour with Pierre Sylvestre.
On 17 March 1705, John was married to Lady Mary Churchill, daughter of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough and Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough.
On 23 October 1717, he was admitted a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians.
He was made a Knight of the Garter in 1719, and was made Order of the Bath, a fellow of the Royal Society in 1725, and a Grand Master of the Premier Grand Lodge of England.
On 22 June 1722, George I appointed him governor of the islands of Saint Lucia and Saint Vincent in the West Indies.
In 1739, the country's first home for abandoned children, the Foundling Hospital was created in London.
Montagu was a supporter of this effort and was one of the charity's founding governors.
He also financed the education of two notable Black British figures of the age, Ignatius Sancho and Francis Williams, sending the latter to Cambridge University.
In 1745, he raised a cavalry regiment known as Montagu's Carabineers, which, however, was disbanded after the Battle of Culloden.
He was a notorious practical joker, his mother-in-law writing of him that "All his talents lie in things only natural in boys of fifteen years old, and he is about two and fifty; to get people into his garden and wet them with squirts, and to invite people to his country houses and put things in beds to make them itch, and twenty such pretty fancies as these."〔quoted in Martin C. Battestin's "General Introduction" to Henry Fielding's ''Joseph Andrews.'' Middleton, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press, 1967: xxvi''n''. Montagu is believed by some literary critics to be the model for Fielding's "roasting squire," the vicious squire who plays practical jokes.〕
He is said to have once dunked the political philosopher Montesquieu in a tub of cold water as a joke.〔Battestin, xxiv''n''.〕
The duke's country place, Boughton House, Northamptonshire, was laid out by him as a miniature Versailles, and now belonging to the Buccleuch family.
After his death, his town residence, Montagu House, Bloomsbury, on the present site of the British Museum, received and for many years held the national collections, which under the name of the British Museum were first opened to the public in 1759.

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