@article{oai:shotoku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001512, author = {岸本, 広司 and Kishimoto, Hiroshi}, journal = {聖徳学園岐阜教育大学紀要, Bulletin of Gifu College of Education}, month = {Sep}, note = {On July 10,1765,shortly after the fall of the Grenville Ministry, George III reluctantly made Lord Rockingham Prime Minister. Charles Watson Wentworth, 2nd Marquis of Rockingham had great territorial influence as a wealthy landowner in Yorkshire andbelonged to the lod Whig aristocracy. But he was not a man of great energy or talent. He needed a knowledgeable and able secretary. He appointed Edmund Burke as his private secretary, on the day succeeding the formation of a ministry. For the next seventeen years, until Rockingham's death in 1782,Burke and Rockingham remained the closest of personal friends and political associates. Late in 1765 (Dec. 23), Burke was returned to Parliament for the borough of Wendover, and made his first speech in the House of Commons a few days after the opening of the sessio of 1766. From the Beginning he was acclaimed as an orator of exceptional promise. His political debut was a great success. In this paper, I proposed to clarify the political backgraound of the formation of the first Rockingham Ministry and the great success of Burke's political debut.}, pages = {1--29}, title = {バークの政界登場とロッキンガム派弁護論(I)}, volume = {22}, year = {1991}, yomi = {キシモト, ヒロシ} }