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In 1846 Ward was promoted to master of the horse and to be minister of the household and finance, with the title of Baron. In these administrative positions Ward showed ability, but a lack of scruple: he was said to have sought popularity by arbitrarily lowering the price of corn, and the partial
118:, and the Austrian connection. In 1854 the Duke Charles III was assassinated in the gardens of his palace at Parma, and Ward was dismissed from all his posts. Ward then claimed the protection of Austria, and spent the rest of his life farming near Vienna. He died on 5 October 1858.
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At Parma Ward remained chief minister to the duke, and continued to work in the interests of the
Austrian government. He was sent as ambassador-extraordinary to Spain in 1848 to negotiate the resumption of diplomatic relations, and was created a knight grand cross of the
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76:, Ward was sent on a mission to Florence to superintend the details of the transfer of Lucca to Tuscany. In accord with the convention of 1818, Charles Louis at the same time succeeded to the
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Subsequently Ward, who was fluent in French, German, and
Italian, went on a diplomatic mission to London, and impressed
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In 1838 Ward married Louise
Genthner, from a Viennese family of domestic servants; they had three sons and a daughter.
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of the
Austrian Empire (1810–1858) was an English jockey and court favourite, who became finance minister in the
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that traded the political independence of the Duchy of Lucca for financial support to the indebted Duke.
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default on the debt of Lucca was also attributed to his advice. In 1847, on the death of the
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headed a group at the
Parmesan court suspicious of Ward, who had been given an estate at
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Reynolds, K. D. "Ward, Thomas, Baron Ward in the nobility of the
Austrian empire".
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230: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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With a personal recommendation, Ward became adviser to
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22:Thomas Ward, 1849 lithograph
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