The question being either "what was the shortest term of a British prime minister? p "who served the shortest term as British prime minister?" or the trickier "how long was the shortest term of a British prime minister?'
Someone in Ireland is probably already taking bets on whether Truss's successor will beat that record. (British bookmakers aren't supposed to take bets on British elections, and this may fall within that.)
Also, the Grauniad has a list of n"shortest-serving world leaders." Two men are tied for shortest, one on a technicality--the Guiness book of World Records is counting the never-proclaimed Louis XIX of France:
Someone in Ireland is probably already taking bets on whether Truss's successor will beat that record. (British bookmakers aren't supposed to take bets on British elections, and this may fall within that.)
Also, the Grauniad has a list of n"shortest-serving world leaders." Two men are tied for shortest, one on a technicality--the Guiness book of World Records is counting the never-proclaimed Louis XIX of France:
He was, apparently king only between the time of his father’s abdication signature and that of his own, both of which were on the same document.
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"Apparently" because there are lots of people who sensibly want their children, and other relatives, to wear a coat if they're going to be outside on cold days, and a story with the moral "this person didn't. because he wanted to look good, and he died of it" can be used to convey that message, better than variations on "I'm cold, put on a sweater."
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France has three pretenders to its throne
In New Orleans, there is both a Bourbon Street and a Napoleon Avenue. As far as I know this latter is the only street in the United States named for a European dictator.