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Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington

Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, KG, GCB, GCH, PC, FRS (1 May 1769 – 14 September 1852) was an Anglo-Irish soldier and Tory statesman who was one of the leading military and political figures of 19th-century Britain, serving twice as prime minister of the United Kingdom. He is among the commanders who won and ended the Napoleonic Wars when the Seventh Coalition defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

The Duke of Wellington
Portrait by Thomas Lawrence, c. 1815-16
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
17 November 1834 – 9 December 1834
MonarchWilliam IV
Preceded byThe Viscount Melbourne
Succeeded bySir Robert Peel
In office
22 January 1828 – 16 November 1830
MonarchsGeorge IV
William IV
Preceded byThe Viscount Goderich
Succeeded byThe Earl Grey
Commander-in-Chief of the British Army
In office
15 August 1842 – 14 September 1852
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byThe Viscount Hill
Succeeded byThe Viscount Hardinge
In office
22 January 1827 – 22 January 1828
MonarchGeorge IV
Preceded byThe Duke of York and Albany
Succeeded byThe Viscount Hill
Leader of the House of Lords
In office
3 September 1841 – 27 June 1846
Prime MinisterSir Robert Peel
Preceded byThe Viscount Melbourne
Succeeded byThe Marquess of Lansdowne
In office
14 November 1834 – 18 April 1835
Prime MinisterSir Robert Peel
Preceded byThe Viscount Melbourne
Succeeded byThe Viscount Melbourne
In office
22 January 1828 – 22 November 1830
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byThe Viscount Goderich
Succeeded byThe Earl Grey
Additional positions
Personal details
Born
Arthur Wesley

1 May 1769
Dublin, Ireland
Died14 September 1852(1852-09-14) (aged 83)
Walmer, England
Resting placeSt Paul's Cathedral
Political party
Spouse
(m. 1806; died 1831)
Children
Parents
Awards
Signature
Military service
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Branch/serviceBritish Army
Years of service1787–1852
RankField Marshal
Battles/wars
Selected battles
     1799–1803      1807–1813      1815

Wellesley was born in Dublin into the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland. He was commissioned as an ensign in the British Army in 1787, serving in Ireland as aide-de-camp to two successive lords lieutenant of Ireland. He was also elected as a member of Parliament in the Irish House of Commons. He was a colonel by 1796 and saw action in the Netherlands and in India, where he fought in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War at the Battle of Seringapatam. He was appointed governor of Seringapatam and Mysore in 1799 and, as a newly appointed major-general, won a decisive victory over the Maratha Confederacy at the Battle of Assaye in 1803.

Wellesley rose to prominence as a general during the Peninsular campaign of the Napoleonic Wars, and was promoted to the rank of field marshal after leading the allied forces to victory against the French Empire at the Battle of Vitoria in 1813. Following Napoleon's exile in 1814, he served as the ambassador to France and was granted a dukedom. During the Hundred Days in 1815, he commanded the allied army which, together with a Prussian Army under Field Marshal Gebhard von Blücher, defeated Napoleon at Waterloo. Wellington's battle record is exemplary; he ultimately participated in some 60 battles during the course of his military career.

Wellington is famous for his adaptive defensive style of warfare, resulting in several victories against numerically superior forces while minimising his own losses. He is regarded as one of the greatest defensive commanders of all time, and many of his tactics and battle plans are still studied in military academies around the world. After the end of his active military career, he returned to politics. He was twice British prime minister as a member of the Tory party from 1828 to 1830 and for a little less than a month in 1834. He oversaw the passage of the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, but opposed the Reform Act 1832. He continued as one of the leading figures in the House of Lords until his retirement and remained Commander-in-Chief of the British Army until his death.

Early life

Family

Wellesley was born into an aristocratic Anglo-Irish family, belonging to the Protestant Ascendancy, in Ireland as The Hon. Arthur Wesley.[2] Wellesley was born the son of Anne Wellesley, Countess of Mornington and Garret Wesley, 1st Earl of Mornington. His father, Garret Wesley, was the son of Richard Wesley, 1st Baron Mornington and had a short career in politics representing the constituency Trim in the Irish House of Commons before succeeding his father as 2nd Baron Mornington in 1758. Garret Wesley was also an accomplished composer and in recognition of his musical and philanthropic achievements was elevated to the rank of Earl of Mornington in 1760.[3] Wellesley's mother was the eldest daughter of Arthur Hill-Trevor, 1st Viscount Dungannon, after whom Wellesley was named.[4]

Wellesley was the sixth of nine children born to the Earl and Countess of Mornington. His siblings included Richard, Viscount Wellesley (1760–1842); later 1st Marquess Wellesley, 2nd Earl of Mornington, Baron Maryborough.[5]

Birth date and place

The exact date and location of Wellesley's birth is not known; however, biographers mostly follow the same contemporary newspaper evidence which states that he was born on 1 May 1769, [a] the day before he was baptised in St Peters Church, Dublin.[8][9] However, Lloyd (1899), p. 170 states "registry of St. Peter's Church, Dublin, shows that he was christened there on 30 April 1769". His baptismal font was donated to St. Nahi's Church in Dundrum, Dublin, in 1914. As to the place of Wellesley's birth, he was most likely born at his parents' townhouse, 24 Upper Merrion Street, Dublin, now the Merrion Hotel.[7] This contrasts with reports that his mother Anne, Countess of Mornington, recalled in 1815 that he had been born at 6 Merrion Street, Dublin.[10] Other places have been put forward as the location of his birth, including Mornington House (the house next door on Upper Merrion), as his father had asserted and the Dublin packet boat.[11]

Childhood

 
Wellesley spent much of his early childhood at his family's ancestral home, Dangan Castle in County Meath, Ireland (engraving, 1842).

Wellesley spent most of his childhood at his family's two homes, the first a large house in Dublin and the second Dangan Castle, 3 miles (5 km) north of Summerhill in County Meath.[12] In 1781, Arthur's father died and his eldest brother Richard inherited his father's earldom.[13]

He went to the diocesan school in Trim when at Dangan, Mr Whyte's Academy when in Dublin, and Brown's School in Chelsea when in London. He then enrolled at Eton College, where he studied from 1781 to 1784.[13] His loneliness there caused him to hate it, and makes it highly unlikely that he actually said "The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton", a quotation which is often attributed to him. Moreover, Eton had no playing fields at the time. In 1785, a lack of success at Eton, combined with a shortage of family funds due to his father's death, forced the young Wellesley and his mother to move to Brussels.[14] Until his early twenties, Arthur showed little sign of distinction and his mother grew increasingly concerned at his idleness, stating, "I don't know what I shall do with my awkward son Arthur."[14]

In 1786, Arthur enrolled in the French Royal Academy of Equitation in Angers, where he progressed significantly, becoming a good horseman and learning French, which later proved very useful.[15] Upon returning to England later the same year, he astonished his mother with his improvement.[16]

Early military career

United Kingdom

 
Beginning in 1787, Wellesley served at Dublin Castle (pictured) as aide-de-camp to two successive Lords Lieutenant of Ireland.

Despite his new promise, Wellesley had yet to find a job and his family was still short of money, so upon the advice of his mother, his brother Richard asked his friend the Duke of Rutland (then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland) to consider Arthur for a commission in the Army.[16] Soon afterward, on 7 March 1787, he was gazetted ensign in the 73rd Regiment of Foot.[17][18] In October, with the assistance of his brother, he was assigned as aide-de-camp, on ten shillings a day (twice his pay as an ensign), to the new Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lord Buckingham.[17] He was also transferred to the new 76th Regiment forming in Ireland and on Christmas Day, 1787, was promoted lieutenant.[17][19] During his time in Dublin his duties were mainly social; attending balls, entertaining guests and providing advice to Buckingham. While in Ireland, he overextended himself in borrowing due to his occasional gambling, but in his defence stated that "I have often known what it was to be in want of money, but I have never got helplessly into debt".[20]

On 23 January 1788, he transferred into the 41st Regiment of Foot,[21] then again on 25 June 1789 he transferred to the 12th (Prince of Wales's) Regiment of (Light) Dragoons[22] and, according to military historian Richard Holmes, he also reluctantly entered politics.[20] Shortly before the general election of 1789, he went to the rotten borough of Trim to speak against the granting of the title "Freeman" of Dublin to the parliamentary leader of the Irish Patriot Party, Henry Grattan.[23] Succeeding, he was later nominated and duly elected as a Member of Parliament (MP) for Trim in the Irish House of Commons.[24] Because of the limited suffrage at the time, he sat in a parliament where at least two-thirds of the members owed their election to the landowners of fewer than a hundred boroughs.[24] Wellesley continued to serve at Dublin Castle, voting with the government in the Irish parliament over the next two years. He became a captain on 30 January 1791, and was transferred to the 58th Regiment of Foot.[24][25][26]

On 31 October, he transferred to the 18th Light Dragoons[27] and it was during this period that he grew increasingly attracted to Kitty Pakenham, the daughter of Edward Pakenham, 2nd Baron Longford.[28] She was described as being full of 'gaiety and charm'.[29] In 1793, he proposed, but was turned down by her brother Thomas, Earl of Longford, who considered Wellesley to be a young man, in debt, with very poor prospects.[30] An aspiring amateur musician, Wellesley, devastated by the rejection, burnt his violins in anger, and resolved to pursue a military career in earnest.[31] He became a major by purchase in the 33rd Regiment in 1793.[28][32] A few months later, in September, his brother lent him more money and with it he purchased a lieutenant-colonelcy in the 33rd.[33][34]

Netherlands

 
Wellesley as Lieutenant Colonel, aged c. 26, in the 33rd Regiment. Portrait by John Hoppner.

In 1793, the Duke of York was sent to Flanders in command of the British contingent of an allied force destined for the invasion of France. In June 1794, Wellesley with the 33rd regiment set sail from Cork bound for Ostend as part of an expedition bringing reinforcements for the army in Flanders. They arrived too late to participate, and joined the Duke of York as he was pulling back towards the Netherlands. On 15 September 1794, at the Battle of Boxtel,[35] east of Breda, Wellington, in temporary command of his brigade, had his first experience of battle. During General Abercromby's withdrawal in the face of superior French forces, the 33rd held off enemy cavalry, allowing neighbouring units to retreat safely. During the extremely harsh winter that followed, Wellesley and his regiment formed part of an allied force holding the defence line along the Waal River. The 33rd, along with the rest of the army, suffered heavy losses from attrition and illness. Wellesley's health was also affected by the damp environment.[36] Though the campaign was to end disastrously, with the British army driven out of the United Provinces into the German states, Wellesley became more aware of battle tactics, including the use of lines of infantry against advancing columns, and the merits of supporting sea-power.[35] He understood that the failure of the campaign was due in part to the faults of the leaders and the poor organisation at headquarters.[37] He remarked later of his time in the Netherlands that "At least I learned what not to do, and that is always a valuable lesson".[37] Returning to England in March 1795, he was reinstated as a member of parliament for Trim for a second time.[38] He hoped to be given the position of secretary of war in the new Irish government but the new lord-lieutenant, Lord Camden, was only able to offer him the post of Surveyor-General of the Ordnance.[38] Declining the post, he returned to his regiment, now at Southampton preparing to set sail for the West Indies. After seven weeks at sea, a storm forced the fleet back to Poole.[38]The 33rd was given time to recuperate and a few months later, Whitehall decided to send the regiment to India. Wellesley was promoted full colonel by seniority on 3 May 1796[39] and a few weeks later set sail for Calcutta with his regiment.[40]

India

Arriving in Calcutta in February 1797 he spent 5 months there, before being sent in August to a brief expedition to the Philippines, where he established a list of new hygiene precautions for his men to deal with the unfamiliar climate.[41] Returning in November to India, he learnt that his elder brother Richard, now known as Lord Mornington, had been appointed as the new Governor-General of India.[42]

In 1798, he changed the spelling of his surname to "Wellesley"; up to this time he was still known as Wesley, which his eldest brother considered the ancient and proper spelling.[42][43]

Fourth Anglo-Mysore War

 
Wellesley in India, wearing his major-general's uniform. Portrait by Robert Home, 1804

As part of the campaign to extend the rule of the British East India Company, the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War broke out in 1798 against the Sultan of Mysore, Tipu Sultan.[44] Arthur's brother Richard ordered that an armed force be sent to capture Seringapatam and defeat Tipu. During the war, rockets were used on several occasions. Wellesley was almost defeated by Tipu's Diwan, Purnaiah, at the Battle of Sultanpet Tope. Quoting Forrest,

At this point (near the village of Sultanpet, Figure 5) there was a large tope, or grove, which gave shelter to Tipu's rocketmen and had obviously to be cleaned out before the siege could be pressed closer to Srirangapattana island. The commander chosen for this operation was Col. Wellesley, but advancing towards the tope after dark on the 5th April 1799, he was set upon with rockets and musket-fires, lost his way and, as Beatson politely puts it, had to "postpone the attack" until a more favourable opportunity should offer.[45]

The following day, Wellesley launched a fresh attack with a larger force, and took the whole position without any killed in action.[46] On 22 April 1799, twelve days before the main battle, rocketeers maneuvered to the rear of the British encampment, then 'threw a great number of rockets at the same instant' to signal the beginning of an assault by 6,000 Indian infantry and a corps of Frenchmen, all ordered by Mir Golam Hussain and Mohomed Hulleen Mir Miran. The rockets had a range of about 1,000 yards. Some burst in the air like shells. Others, called ground rockets, would rise again on striking the ground and bound along in a serpentine motion until their force was spent. According to one British observer, a young English officer named Bayly: "So pestered were we with the rocket boys that there was no moving without danger from the destructive missiles ...". He continued:[46]

The rockets and musketry from 20,000 of the enemy were incessant. No hail could be thicker. Every illumination of blue lights was accompanied by a shower of rockets, some of which entered the head of the column, passing through to the rear, causing death, wounds, and dreadful lacerations from the long bamboos of twenty or thirty feet, which are invariably attached to them.

Under the command of General Harris, some 24,000 troops were dispatched to Madras (to join an equal force being sent from Bombay in the west).[47] Arthur and the 33rd sailed to join them in August.[48]

After extensive and careful logistic preparation (which would become one of Wellesley's main attributes)[49] the 33rd left with the main force in December and travelled across 250 miles (402 km) of jungle from Madras to Mysore.[49] On account of his brother, during the journey, Wellesley was given an additional command, that of chief advisor to the Nizam of Hyderabad's army (sent to accompany the British force).[47] This position was to cause friction among many of the senior officers (some of whom were senior to Wellesley).[50] Much of this friction was put to rest after the Battle of Mallavelly, some 20 miles (32 km) from Seringapatam, in which Harris' army attacked a large part of the sultan's army. During the battle, Wellesley led his men, in a line of battle of two ranks, against the enemy to a gentle ridge and gave the order to fire.[51] After an extensive repetition of volleys, followed by a bayonet charge, the 33rd, in conjunction with the rest of Harris's force, forced Tipu's infantry to retreat.[52]

Seringapatam

Immediately after their arrival at Seringapatam on 5 April 1799, the Battle of Seringapatam began and Wellesley was ordered to lead a night attack on the village of Sultanpettah, adjacent to the fortress to clear the way for the artillery.[53] Because of a variety of factors including the Mysorean army's strong defensive preparations and the darkness the attack failed with 25 casualties due to confusion among the British. Wellesley suffered a minor injury to his knee from a spent musket-ball.[54][55] Although they would re-attack successfully the next day, after time to scout ahead the enemy's positions, the affair affected Wellesley. He resolved "never to attack an enemy who is preparing and strongly posted, and whose posts have not been reconnoitred by daylight".[46]Lewin Bentham Bowring gives this alternative account:

One of these groves, called the Sultanpet Tope, was intersected by deep ditches, watered from a channel running in an easterly direction about a mile from the fort. General Baird was directed to scour this grove and dislodge the enemy, but on his advancing with this object on the night of the 5th, he found the tope unoccupied. The next day, however, the Mysore troops again took possession of the ground, and as it was absolutely necessary to expel them, two columns were detached at sunset for the purpose. The first of these, under Colonel Shawe, got possession of a ruined village, which it successfully held. The second column, under Colonel Wellesley, on advancing into the tope, was at once attacked in the darkness of night by a tremendous fire of musketry and rockets. The men, floundering about amidst the trees and the water-courses, at last broke, and fell back in disorder, some being killed and a few taken prisoners. In the confusion Colonel Wellesley was himself struck on the knee by a spent ball, and narrowly escaped falling into the hands of the enemy.[56]

A few weeks later, after extensive artillery bombardment, a breach was opened in the main walls of the fortress of Seringapatam.[46] An attack led by Major-General Baird secured the fortress. Wellesley secured the rear of the advance, posting guards at the breach and then stationed his regiment at the main palace.[57] After hearing news of the death of the Tipu Sultan, Wellesley was the first at the scene to confirm his death, checking his pulse.[58] Over the coming day, Wellesley grew increasingly concerned over the lack of discipline among his men, who drank and pillaged the fortress and city. To restore order, several soldiers were flogged and four hanged.[59]

After battle and the resulting end of the war, the main force under General Harris left Seringapatam and Wellesley, aged 30, stayed behind to command the area as the new Governor of Seringapatam and Mysore. While in India, Wellesley was ill for a considerable time, first with severe diarrhoea from the water and then with fever, followed by a serious skin infection caused by trichophyton.[60]

Wellesley was in charge of raising an Anglo-Indian expeditionary force in Trincomali in early 1801[61] for the capture of Batavia and Mauritius from the French. However, on the eve of its departure, orders arrived from England that it was to be sent to Egypt to co-operate with Sir Ralph Abercromby in the expulsion of the French from Egypt. Wellesley had been appointed second in command to Baird, but owing to ill health did not accompany the expedition on 9 April 1801. This was fortunate for Wellesley, since the very vessel on which he was to have sailed sank in the Red Sea.[62]

He was promoted to brigadier-general on 17 July 1801. He took residence within the Sultan's summer palace and reformed the tax and justice systems in his province to maintain order and prevent bribery.[52] He also defeated the rebel warlord Dhoondiah Waugh in the Battle of Conaghull, after the latter had escaped from prison in Seringapatam during the battle there.[63]

Dhoondiah Waugh insurgency

In 1800, whilst serving as Governor of Mysore, Wellesley was tasked with putting down an insurgency led by Dhoondiah Waugh, formerly a Patan trooper for Tipu Sultan.[64] After the fall of Seringapatam he became a powerful brigand, raiding villages along the Maratha–Mysore border region. Despite initial setbacks, the East India Company having pursued and destroyed his forces once already, forcing him into retreat in August 1799, he raised a sizeable force composed of disbanded Mysore soldiers, captured small outposts and forts in Mysore, and was receiving the support of several Maratha killedars opposed to British occupation.[65] This drew the attention of the British administration, who were beginning to recognise him as more than just a bandit, as his raids, expansion and threats to destabilise British authority suddenly increased in 1800.[66] The death of Tipu Sultan had created a power vacuum and Waugh was seeking to fill it.[65]

Given independent command of a combined East India Company and British Army force,[67] Wellesley ventured north to confront Waugh in June 1800, with an army of 8,000 infantry and cavalry, having learnt that Waugh's forces numbered over 50,000, although the majority (around 30,000) were irregular light cavalry and unlikely to pose a serious threat to British infantry and artillery.[68]

Throughout June–August 1800, Wellesley advanced through Waugh's territory, his troops escalading forts in turn and capturing each one with "trifling loss".[69] The forts generally offered little resistance due to their poor construction and design.[67] Wellesley did not have sufficient troops to garrison each fort and had to clear the surrounding area of insurgents before advancing to the next fort.[70] On 31 July, he had "taken and destroyed Dhoondiah's baggage and six guns, and driven into the Malpoorba (where they were drowned) about five thousand people".[71] Dhoondiah continued to retreat, but his forces were rapidly deserting, he had no infantry and due to the monsoon weather flooding river crossings he could no longer outpace the British advance.[72] On 10 September, at the Battle of Conaghul, Wellesley personally led a charge of 1,400 British dragoons and Indian cavalry, in single line with no reserve, against Dhoondiah and his remaining 5,000 cavalry.[72] Dhoondiah was killed during the clash, his body was discovered and taken to the British camp tied to a cannon. With this victory, Wellesley's campaign was concluded, and British authority had been restored.[73]

Wellesley, with command of four regiments, had defeated Dhoondiah's larger rebel force, along with Dhoondiah himself, who was killed in the final battle. Wellesley then paid for the future upkeep of Dhoondiah's orphaned son.[74]

Second Anglo-Maratha War

In September 1802, Wellesley learnt that he had been promoted to the rank of major-general.[75] He had been gazetted on 29 April 1802, but the news took several months to reach him by sea. He remained at Mysore until November when he was sent to command an army in the Second Anglo-Maratha War.[75]

When he determined that a long defensive war would ruin his army, Wellesley decided to act boldly to defeat the numerically larger force of the Maratha Empire.[76] With the logistic assembly of his army complete (24,000 men in total) he gave the order to break camp and attack the nearest Maratha fort on 8 August 1803.[77] The fort surrendered on 12 August after an infantry attack had exploited an artillery-made breach in the wall. With the fort now in British control Wellesley was able to extend control southwards to the river Godavari.[78]

Assaye, Argaum and Gawilghur
 
Arthur Wellesley (mounted) at the Battle of Assaye (engraving after William Heath). Wellesley later remarked that it was his greatest victory.[79]

Splitting his army into two forces, to pursue and locate the main Marathas army, (the second force, commanded by Colonel Stevenson was far smaller) Wellesley was preparing to rejoin his forces on 24 September. His intelligence, however, reported the location of the Marathas' main army, between two rivers near Assaye.[80] If he waited for the arrival of his second force, the Marathas would be able to mount a retreat, so Wellesley decided to launch an attack immediately.[80]

On 23 September, Wellesley led his forces over a ford in the river Kaitna and the Battle of Assaye commenced.[81] After crossing the ford the infantry was reorganised into several lines and advanced against the Maratha infantry. Wellesley ordered his cavalry to exploit the flank of the Maratha army just near the village.[81] During the battle Wellesley himself came under fire; two of his horses were shot from under him and he had to mount a third.[82] At a crucial moment, Wellesley regrouped his forces and ordered Colonel Maxwell (later killed in the attack) to attack the eastern end of the Maratha position while Wellesley himself directed a renewed infantry attack against the centre.[82]

An officer in the attack wrote of the importance of Wellesley's personal leadership: "The General was in the thick of the action the whole time ... I never saw a man so cool and collected as he was ... though I can assure you, 'til our troops got the order to advance the fate of the day seemed doubtful ..."[83] With some 6,000 Marathas killed or wounded, the enemy was routed, though Wellesley's force was in no condition to pursue. British casualties were heavy: the British losses amounted to 428 killed, 1,138 wounded and 18 missing (the British casualty figures were taken from Wellesley's own despatch).[84] Wellesley was troubled by the loss of men and remarked that he hoped "I should not like to see again such loss as I sustained on 23 September, even if attended by such gain".[79] Years later, however, he remarked that Assaye, and not Waterloo, was the best battle he ever fought.[79]

Despite the damage done to the Maratha army, the battle did not end the war.[85] A few months later in November, Wellesley attacked a larger force near Argaum, leading his army to victory again, with an astonishing 5,000 enemy dead at the cost of only 361 British casualties.[85] A further successful attack at the fortress at Gawilghur, combined with the victory of General Lake at Delhi forced the Maratha to sign a peace settlement at Anjangaon (not concluded until a year later) called the Treaty of Surji-Anjangaon.[86]

Military historian Richard Holmes remarked that Wellesley's experiences in India had an important influence on his personality and military tactics, teaching him much about military matters that would prove vital to his success in the Peninsular War.[87] These included a strong sense of discipline through drill and order,[88] the use of diplomacy to gain allies, and the vital necessity of a secure supply line. He also established high regard for the acquisition of intelligence through scouts and spies.[88] His personal tastes also developed, including dressing himself in white trousers, a dark tunic, with Hessian boots and black cocked hat (that later became synonymous as his style).[89]

Leaving India
 
Major-General Wellesley meeting with Nawab Azim-ud-Daula, 1805

Wellesley had grown tired of his time in India, remarking "I have served as long in India as any man ought who can serve anywhere else".[90] In June 1804 he applied for permission to return home and as a reward for his service in India he was made a Knight of the Bath in September.[90] While in India, Wellesley had amassed a fortune of £42,000 (considerable at the time), consisting mainly of prize money from his campaign.[90] When his brother's term as Governor-General of India ended in March 1805, the brothers returned together to England on HMS Howe. Wellesley, coincidentally, stopped on his voyage at the island of Saint Helena and stayed in the same building in which Napoleon I would live during his later exile.[91]

Return to Britain

Meeting Nelson

In September 1805, Major-General Wellesley was newly returned from his campaigns in India and was not yet particularly well known to the public. He reported to the office of the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies to request a new assignment. In the waiting room, he met Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson, already a known figure after his victories at the Nile and Copenhagen, who was briefly in England after months pursuing the French Toulon fleet to the West Indies and back. Some 30 years later, Wellington recalled a conversation that Nelson began with him which Wellesley found "almost all on his side in a style so vain and silly as to surprise and almost disgust me".[92] Nelson left the room to inquire who the young general was and, on his return, switched to a very different tone, discussing the war, the state of the colonies, and the geopolitical situation as between equals.[93] On this second discussion, Wellington recalled, "I don't know that I ever had a conversation that interested me more".[94] This was the only time that the two men met; Nelson was killed at his victory at Trafalgar seven weeks later.[92]

Wellesley then served in the abortive Anglo-Russian expedition to north Germany in 1805, taking a brigade to Elbe.[95]

He then took a period of extended leave from the army and was elected as a Tory member of the British parliament for Rye in January 1806.[96][97] A year later, he was elected MP for Newport on the Isle of Wight, and was then appointed to serve as Chief Secretary for Ireland under the Duke of Richmond. At the same time, he was made a privy counsellor.[96] While in Ireland, he gave a verbal promise that the remaining Penal Laws would be enforced with great moderation, perhaps an indication of his later willingness to support Catholic emancipation.[98]

War against Denmark-Norway

Wellesley was in Ireland in May 1807 when he heard of the British expedition to Denmark-Norway. He decided to go, while maintaining his political appointments, and was appointed to command an infantry brigade in the Second Battle of Copenhagen, which took place in August. He fought at Køge, during which the men under his command took 1,500 prisoners, with Wellesley later present during the surrender.[96]

By 30 September, he had returned to England and was raised to the rank of lieutenant general on 25 April 1808.[96] In June 1808 he accepted the command of an expedition of 9,000 men. Preparing to sail for an attack on the Spanish colonies in South America (to assist the Latin American patriot Francisco de Miranda) his force was instead ordered to sail for Portugal, to take part in the Peninsular Campaign and rendezvous with 5,000 troops from Gibraltar.[99][100]

Peninsular War

1808–1809

Ready for battle, Wellesley left Cork on 12 July 1808 to participate in the war against French forces in the Iberian Peninsula, with his skills as a commander tested and developed.[99]According to the historian Robin Neillands:

Wellesley had by now acquired the experience on which his later successes were founded. He knew about command from the ground up, about the importance of logistics, about campaigning in a hostile environment. He enjoyed political influence and realised the need to maintain support at home. Above all, he had gained a clear idea of how, by setting attainable objectives and relying on his own force and abilities, a campaign could be fought and won.[99]

 
Reenactors of the 33rd Regiment of Foot Wellington's Redcoats who fought in the Napoleonic Wars, 1812–1815, here showing the standard line 8th Company

Wellesley defeated the French at the Battle of Roliça and the Battle of Vimeiro in 1808[101] but was superseded in command immediately after the latter battle. General Dalrymple then signed the controversial Convention of Sintra, which stipulated that the Royal Navy transport the French army out of Lisbon with all their loot, and insisted on the association of the only available government minister, Wellesley.[101] Dalrymple and Wellesley were recalled to Britain to face a Court of Enquiry. Wellesley had agreed to sign the preliminary armistice, but had not signed the convention, and was cleared.[102]

Simultaneously, Napoleon entered Spain with his veteran troops to put down the revolt; the new commander of the British forces in the Peninsula, Sir John Moore, died during the Battle of Corunna in January 1809.[103]

Although overall the land war with France was not going well from a British perspective, the Peninsula was the one theatre where they, with the Portuguese, had provided strong resistance against France and her allies. This contrasted with the disastrous Walcheren expedition, which was typical of the mismanaged British operations of the time. Wellesley submitted a memorandum to Lord Castlereagh on the defence of Portugal. He stressed its mountainous frontiers and advocated Lisbon as the main base because the Royal Navy could help to defend it. Castlereagh and the cabinet approved the memo and appointed him head of all British forces in Portugal.[104]

Wellesley arrived in Lisbon on 22 April 1809 on board HMS Surveillante,[105]after narrowly escaping shipwreck.[106] Reinforced, he took to the offensive. In the Second Battle of Porto he crossed the Douro river in a daylight coup de main, and routed Marshal Soult's French troops in Porto.[107]

With Portugal secured, Wellesley advanced into Spain to unite with General Cuesta's forces. The combined allied force prepared for an assault on Marshal Victor's I Corps at Talavera, 23 July. Cuesta, however, was reluctant to agree, and was only persuaded to advance on the following day.[108] The delay allowed the French to withdraw, but Cuesta sent his army headlong after Victor, and found himself faced by almost the entire French army in New Castile—Victor had been reinforced by the Toledo and Madrid garrisons. The Spanish retreated precipitously, necessitating the advance of two British divisions to cover their retreat.[109]

The next day, 27 July, at the Battle of Talavera the French advanced in three columns and were repulsed several times throughout the day by Wellesley, but at a heavy cost to the British force. In the aftermath Marshal Soult's army was discovered to be advancing south, threatening to cut Wellesley off from Portugal. Wellesley moved east on 3 August to block it, leaving 1,500 wounded in the care of the Spanish,[110] intending to confront Soult before finding out that the French were in fact 30,000 strong. The British commander sent the Light Brigade on a dash to hold the bridge over the Tagus at Almaraz. With communications and supply from Lisbon secured for now, Wellesley considered joining with Cuesta again but found out that his Spanish ally had abandoned the British wounded to the French and was thoroughly uncooperative, promising and then refusing to supply the British forces, aggravating Wellesley and causing considerable friction between the British and their Spanish allies. The lack of supplies, coupled with the threat of French reinforcement (including the possible inclusion of Napoleon himself) in the spring, led to the British deciding to retreat into Portugal.[111]

Following his victory at Talavera, Wellesley was elevated to the Peerage of the United Kingdom on 26 August 1809 as Viscount Wellington of Talavera and of Wellington, in the County of Somerset, with the subsidiary title of Baron Douro of Wellesley.[112][113]

1810–1812

In 1810, a newly enlarged French army under Marshal André Masséna invaded Portugal. British opinion was negative and there were suggestions to evacuate Portugal. Instead, Lord Wellington first slowed the French at Buçaco;[114] he then prevented them from taking the Lisbon Peninsula by the construction of massive earthworks, known as the Lines of Torres Vedras, which had been assembled in complete secrecy with their flanks guarded by the Royal Navy.[115] The baffled and starving French invasion forces retreated after six months. Wellington's pursuit was hindered by a series of reverses inflicted by Marshal Ney in a much-lauded rear guard campaign.[116]

In 1811, Masséna returned toward Portugal to relieve Almeida; Wellington narrowly checked the French at the Battle of Fuentes de Oñoro.[117] Simultaneously, his subordinate, Viscount Beresford, fought Soult's 'Army of the South' to a bloody stalemate at the Battle of Albuera in May.[118] Wellington was promoted to full general on 31 July for his services. The French abandoned Almeida, avoiding British pursuit,[119] but retained the twin Spanish fortresses of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz, the 'Keys' guarding the roads through the mountain passes into Portugal.[120]

 
Wellington at the Battle of Salamanca (engraving after William Heath)

In 1812, Wellington finally captured Ciudad Rodrigo via a rapid movement as the French went into winter quarters, storming it before they could react. He then moved south quickly, besieged the fortress of Badajoz for a month and captured it during the night on 6 April 1812. On viewing the aftermath of the Storming of Badajoz, Wellington lost his composure and cried at the sight of the British dead in the breaches.[121]

His army now was a veteran British force reinforced by units of the retrained Portuguese army. Campaigning in Spain, he was made Earl of Wellington in the county of Somerset on 22 February 1812.[122] He routed the French at the Battle of Salamanca, taking advantage of a minor French mispositioning.[123] The victory liberated the Spanish capital of Madrid. He was later made Marquess of Wellington, in the said county on 18 August 1812.[124]

Wellington attempted to take the vital fortress of Burgos, which linked Madrid to France. He failed, due in part to a lack of siege guns, forcing him into a headlong retreat with the loss of over 2,000 casualties.[125]

The French abandoned Andalusia, and combined the troops of Soult and Marmont. Thus combined, the French outnumbered the British, putting the British forces in a precarious position. Wellington withdrew his army and, joined by the smaller corps under the command of Rowland Hill, which had been moved to Madrid, began to retreat to Portugal. Marshal Soult declined to attack.[126]

1813–1814

In 1813, Wellington led a new offensive, this time against the French line of communications. He struck through the hills north of Burgos, the Tras os Montes, and switched his supply line from Portugal to Santander on Spain's north coast; this led to the French abandoning Madrid and Burgos. Continuing to outflank the French lines, Wellington caught up with and routed the army of King Joseph Bonaparte in the Battle of Vitoria, for which he was promoted to field marshal on 21 June.[127] He personally led a column against the French centre, while other columns commanded by Sir Thomas Graham, Rowland Hill and the Earl of Dalhousie looped around the French right and left (this battle became the subject of Beethoven's orchestral piece, the Wellington's Victory (Opus 91). The British troops broke ranks to loot the abandoned French wagons instead of pursuing the beaten foe. When troops failed to return to their units and began harassing the locals, an enraged Wellington to write in a famous despatch to Earl Bathurst, "We have in the service the scum of the earth as common soldiers".[128]

Although later, when his temper had cooled, he extended his comment to praise the men under his command saying that though many of the men were, "the scum of the earth; it is really wonderful that we should have made them to the fine fellows they are".[129]

After taking the small fortresses of Pamplona, Wellington invested San Sebastián but was frustrated by the obstinate French garrison, losing 693 dead and 316 captured in a failed assault and suspending the siege at the end of July. Soult's relief attempt was blocked by the Spanish Army of Galicia at San Marcial, allowing the Allies to consolidate their position and tighten the ring around the city, which fell in September after a second spirited defence.[130] Wellington then forced Soult's demoralised and battered army into a fighting retreat into France, punctuated by battles at the Pyrenees,[131] Bidassoa and Nivelle.[132][133] Wellington invaded southern France, winning at the Nive and Orthez.[134] Wellington's final battle against his rival Soult occurred at Toulouse, where the Allied divisions were badly mauled storming the French redoubts, losing some 4,600 men. Despite this momentary victory, news arrived of Napoleon's defeat and abdication[135] and Soult, seeing no reason to continue the fighting, agreed on a ceasefire with Wellington, allowing Soult to evacuate the city.[136]

Hailed as the conquering hero by the British, on 3 May 1814 Wellington was made Duke of Wellington, in the county of Somerset, together with the subsidiary title of Marquess Douro, in said County.[112][137]

He received some recognition during his lifetime (the title of "Duque de Ciudad Rodrigo" and "Grandee of Spain") and the Spanish King Ferdinand VII allowed him to keep part of the works of art from the Royal Collection which he had recovered from the French. His equestrian portrait features prominently in the Monument to the Battle of Vitoria, in present-day Vitoria-Gasteiz.[138]

 
Wellington (far left) alongside Metternich, Talleyrand and other European diplomats at the Congress of Vienna, 1815 (engraving after Jean-Baptiste Isabey)

His popularity in Britain was due to his image and his appearance as well as to his military triumphs. His victory fitted well with the passion and intensity of the Romantic movement, with its emphasis on individuality. His personal style influenced the fashions in Britain at the time: his tall, lean figure and his plumed black hat and grand yet classic uniform and white trousers became very popular.[139]

In late 1814, the Prime Minister wanted him to take command in Canada with the assignment of winning the War of 1812 against the United States. Wellesley replied that he would go to America, but he believed that he was needed more in Europe. He stated:

I think you have no right, from the state of war, to demand any concession of territory from America... You have not been able to carry it into the enemy's territory, notwithstanding your military success, and now undoubted military superiority, and have not even cleared your own territory on the point of attack. You cannot on any principle of equality in negotiation claim a cession of territory except in exchange for other advantages which you have in your power... Then if this reasoning be true, why stipulate for the uti possidetis? You can get no territory: indeed, the state of your military operations, however creditable, does not entitle you to demand any.[140]

He was appointed Ambassador to France,[141] then took Lord Castlereagh's place as first plenipotentiary to the Congress of Vienna, where he strongly advocated allowing France to keep its place in the European balance of power. On 2 January 1815 the title of his Knighthood of the Bath was converted to Knight Grand Cross upon the expansion of that order.[142]

Hundred Days

Facing Napoleon

 
Engraving of Wellesley by William Say after Thomas Phillips

On 26 February 1815, Napoleon escaped from Elba and returned to France. He regained control of the country by May and faced a renewed alliance against him.[143] Wellington left Vienna for what became known as the Waterloo Campaign. He arrived in the Netherlands to take command of the British-German army and their allied Dutch, all stationed alongside the Prussian forces of Generalfeldmarschall Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher.[144]

Napoleon's strategy was to isolate the Allied and Prussian armies and annihilate each one separately before the Austrians and Russians arrived. In doing so the vast superiority in numbers of the Coalition would be greatly diminished. He would then seek the possibility of peace with Austria and Russia.[145]

The French invaded the Netherlands, with Napoleon defeating the Prussians at Ligny, and Marshal Ney engaging indecisively with Wellington at the Battle of Quatre Bras.[146] The Prussians retreated 18 miles north to Wavre whilst Wellington's Anglo-Allied army withdrew 15 miles north to a site he had noted the previous year as favourable for a battle: the north ridge of a shallow valley on the Brussels road, just south of the small town of Waterloo. On 17 June there was torrential rain, which severely hampered movement.[147] and had a considerable effect the next day, 18 June, when the Battle of Waterloo was fought. This was the first time Wellington had encountered Napoleon; he commanded an Anglo-Dutch-German army that consisted of approximately 73,000 troops, 26,000 of whom were British.[148] Approximately 30 percent of that 26,000 were Irish.[149]

Battle of Waterloo

 
Wellington at Waterloo, by Robert Alexander Hillingford

The Battle of Waterloo was fought on Sunday 18 June 1815, near Waterloo (at that time in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, now in Belgium). It commenced with a diversionary attack on Hougoumont by a division of French soldiers. After a barrage of 80 cannons, the first French infantry attack was launched by Comte D'Erlon's I Corps. D'Erlon's troops advanced through the Allied centre, resulting in Allied troops in front of the ridge retreating in disorder through the main position. D'Erlon's corps stormed the most fortified Allied position, La Haye Sainte, but failed to take it. An Allied division under Thomas Picton met the remainder of D'Erlon's corps head to head, engaging them in an infantry duel in which Picton fell. During this struggle Lord Uxbridge launched two of his cavalry brigades at the enemy, catching the French infantry off guard, driving them to the bottom of the slope, and capturing two French Imperial Eagles. The charge, however, over-reached itself, and the British cavalry, crushed by fresh French horsemen hurled at them by Napoleon, were driven back, suffering tremendous losses.[150]

A little before 16:00, Marshal Ney noted an apparent exodus from Wellington's centre. He mistook the movement of casualties to the rear for the beginnings of a retreat, and sought to exploit it. Ney at this time had few infantry reserves left, as most of the infantry had been committed either to the futile Hougoumont attack or to the defence of the French right. Ney, therefore, tried to break Wellington's centre with a cavalry charge alone.[151]

 
The Grenadiers à Cheval. Napoleon can be seen in the background on a grey horse. A number of different mounts could have been ridden by Napoleon at Waterloo: Ali, Crebère, Désirée, Jaffa, Marie and Tauris [152]

At about 16:30, the first Prussian corps arrived. Commanded by Freiherr von Bülow, IV Corps arrived as the French cavalry attack was in full spate. Bülow sent the 15th Brigade to link up with Wellington's left flank in the FrichermontLa Haie area while the brigade's horse artillery battery and additional brigade artillery deployed to its left in support.[153] Napoleon sent Lobau's corps to intercept the rest of Bülow's IV Corps proceeding to Plancenoit. The 15th Brigade sent Lobau's corps into retreat to the Plancenoit area. Von Hiller's 16th Brigade also pushed forward with six battalions against Plancenoit. Napoleon had dispatched all eight battalions of the Young Guard to reinforce Lobau, who was now seriously pressed by the enemy. Napoleon's Young Guard counter-attacked and, after very hard fighting, secured Plancenoit, but were themselves counter-attacked and driven out.[154] Napoleon then resorted to sending two battalions of the Middle and Old Guard into Plancenoit and after ferocious fighting they recaptured the village.[154] The French cavalry attacked the British infantry squares many times, each at a heavy cost to the French but with few British casualties. Ney himself was displaced from his horse four times.[155] Eventually, it became obvious, even to Ney, that cavalry alone were achieving little. Belatedly, he organised a combined-arms attack, using Bachelu's division and Tissot's regiment of Foy's division from Reille's II Corps plus those French cavalry that remained in a fit state to fight. This assault was directed along much the same route as the previous heavy cavalry attacks.[156]

 
The storming of La Haye Sainte, by Richard Knötel

Meanwhile, at approximately the same time as Ney's combined-arms assault on the centre-right of Wellington's line, Napoleon ordered Ney to capture La Haye Sainte at whatever the cost. Ney accomplished this with what was left of D'Erlon's corps soon after 18:00. Ney then moved horse artillery up towards Wellington's centre and began to attack the infantry squares at short-range with canister.[151] This all but destroyed the 27th (Inniskilling) Regiment, and the 30th and 73rd Regiments suffered such heavy losses that they had to combine to form a viable square. Wellington's centre was now on the verge of collapse and wide open to an attack from the French. Luckily for Wellington, Pirch I's and Zieten's corps of the Prussian Army were now at hand. Zieten's corps permitted the two fresh cavalry brigades of Vivian and Vandeleur on Wellington's extreme left to be moved and posted behind the depleted centre. Pirch I Corps then proceeded to support Bülow and together they regained possession of Plancenoit, and once more the Charleroi road was swept by Prussian round shot. The value of this reinforcement is held in high regard.[150]

 
Wellington at the battle of Waterloo

The French army now fiercely attacked the Coalition all along the line with the culminating point being reached when Napoleon sent forward the Imperial Guard at 19:30. The attack of the Imperial Guards was mounted by five battalions of the Middle Guard, and not by the Grenadiers or Chasseurs of the Old Guard. Marching through a hail of canister and skirmisher fire and severely outnumbered, the 3,000 or so Middle Guardsmen advanced to the west of La Haye Sainte and proceeded to separate into three distinct attack forces. One, consisting of two battalions of Grenadiers, defeated the Coalition's first line and marched on. Chassé's relatively fresh Dutch division was sent against them, and Allied artillery fired into the victorious Grenadiers' flank. This still could not stop the Guard's advance, so Chassé ordered his first brigade to charge the outnumbered French, who faltered and broke.[157]

 
British 10th Hussars of Vivian's Brigade (red shakos – blue uniforms) attacking mixed French troops, including a square of Guard grenadiers (left, middle distance) in the final stages of the battle

Further to the west, 1,500 British Foot Guards under Maitland were lying down to protect themselves from the French artillery. As two battalions of Chasseurs approached, the second prong of the Imperial Guard's attack, Maitland's guardsmen rose and devastated them with point-blank volleys. The Chasseurs deployed to counter-attack but began to waver. A bayonet charge by the Foot Guards then broke them. The third prong, a fresh Chasseur battalion, now came up in support. The British guardsmen retreated with these Chasseurs in pursuit, but the latter were halted as the 52nd Light Infantry wheeled in line onto their flank and poured a devastating fire into them and then charged.[157][158] Under this onslaught, they too broke.[158]

The last of the Guard retreated headlong. Mass panic ensued through the French lines as the news spread: "La Garde recule. Sauve qui peut!" ("The Guard is retreating. Every man for himself!"). Wellington then stood up in Copenhagen's stirrups, and waved his hat in the air to signal an advance of the Allied line just as the Prussians were overrunning the French positions to the east. What remained of the French army then abandoned the field in disorder. Wellington and Blücher met at the inn of La Belle Alliance, on the north–south road which bisected the battlefield, and it was agreed that the Prussians should pursue the retreating French army back to France.[157] The Treaty of Paris was signed on 20 November 1815.[159]

After the victory, the Duke supported proposals that a medal be awarded to all British soldiers who participated in the Waterloo campaign, and on 28 June 1815, he wrote to the Duke of York suggesting:

... the expediency of giving to the non-commissioned officers and soldiers engaged in the Battle of Waterloo a medal. I am convinced it would have the best effect in the army, and if the battle should settle our concerns, they will well deserve it.

The Waterloo Medal was duly authorised and distributed to all ranks in 1816.[160]

Controversy

Much historical discussion has been made about Napoleon's decision to send 33,000 troops under Marshal Grouchy to intercept the Prussians, but—having defeated Blücher at Ligny on 16 June and forced the Allies to retreat in divergent directions—Napoleon may have been strategically astute in a judgement that he would have been unable to beat the combined Allied forces on one battlefield. Wellington's comparable strategic gamble was to leave 17,000 troops and artillery, mostly Dutch, 8.1 mi (13.0 km) away at Halle, north-west of Mont-Saint-Jean, in case of a French advance up the Mons-Hal-Brussels road.[161]

 
Wellington at the battle of Waterloo. Detail of a painting by Jan Willem Pieneman, 1824

The campaign led to numerous other controversies. Issues concerning Wellington's troop dispositions prior to Napoleon's invasion of the Netherlands, whether Wellington misled or betrayed Blücher by promising, then failing, to come directly to Blücher's aid at Ligny, and credit for the victory between Wellington and the Prussians. These and other such issues concerning Blücher's, Wellington's, and Napoleon's decisions during the campaign were the subject of a strategic-level study by the Prussian political-military theorist Carl von Clausewitz, Feldzug von 1815: Strategische Uebersicht des Feldzugs von 1815, (English title: The Campaign of 1815: Strategic Overview of the Campaign.)[b] This study was Clausewitz's last such work and is widely considered to be the best example of Clausewitz's mature theories concerning such analyses.[162] It attracted the attention of Wellington's staff, who prompted the Duke to write a published essay on the campaign (other than his immediate, official after-action report, "The Waterloo Dispatch".) This was published as the 1842 "Memorandum on the Battle of Waterloo". While Wellington disputed Clausewitz on several points, Clausewitz largely absolved Wellington of accusations levelled against him. This exchange with Clausewitz was quite famous in Britain in the 19th century, particularly in Charles Cornwallis Chesney's work the Waterloo Lectures, but was largely ignored in the 20th century due to hostilities between Britain and Germany.[163]

Politics

Prime Minister

 
Portrait of the Duke of Wellington by John Jackson, 1830–31

Wellington entered politics again when he was appointed Master-General of the Ordnance in the Tory government of Lord Liverpool on 26 December 1818.[164] He also became Governor of Plymouth on 9 October 1819.[165] He was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the British Army on 22 January 1827[166][167] and Constable of the Tower of London on 5 February 1827.[168]

Along with Robert Peel, Wellington became an increasingly influential member of the Tory party, and in 1828 he resigned as Commander-in-Chief and became prime minister.[169]

During his first seven months as prime minister, he chose not to live in the official residence at 10 Downing Street, finding it too small. He moved in only because his own home, Apsley House, required extensive renovations. During this time he was largely instrumental in the foundation of King's College London. On 20 January 1829 Wellington was appointed Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports.[170]

Reform

His term was marked by Roman Catholic Emancipation: the restoration of most civil rights to Roman Catholics in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. The change was prompted by the landslide by-election win of Daniel O'Connell, a Roman Catholic Irish proponent of emancipation, who was elected despite not being legally allowed to sit in Parliament. In the House of Lords, facing stiff opposition, Wellington spoke for Catholic Emancipation, and according to some sources, gave one of the best speeches of his career.[171] Wellington was born in Ireland and so had some understanding of the grievances of the Roman Catholic majority there; as Chief Secretary, he had given an undertaking that the remaining Penal Laws would only be enforced as "mildly" as possible.[98] In 1811 Catholic soldiers were given freedom of worship[172] and 18 years later the Catholic Relief Act 1829 was passed with a majority of 105. Many Tories voted against the Act, and it passed only with the help of the Whigs.[173] Wellington had threatened to resign as prime minister if King George IV did not give Royal Assent.[174]

 
A satirical cartoon attacking the Duke of Wellington, then prime minister, for the passage in April 1829 of the Roman Catholic Relief Act

The Earl of Winchilsea accused the Duke of "an insidious design for the infringement of our liberties and the introduction of Popery into every department of the State".[175] Wellington responded by immediately challenging Winchilsea to a duel. On 21 March 1829, Wellington and Winchilsea met on Battersea fields. When the time came to fire, the Duke took aim and Winchilsea kept his arm down. The Duke fired wide to the right. Accounts differ as to whether he missed on purpose, an act known in duelling as a delope. Wellington claimed he did. However, he was noted for his poor aim and reports more sympathetic to Winchilsea claimed he had aimed to kill. Winchilsea discharged his pistol into the air, a plan he and his second had almost certainly decided upon before the duel.[176]Honour was saved and Winchilsea wrote Wellington an apology.[175][177]

The nickname "Iron Duke" originated from this period, when he experienced a high degree of personal and political unpopularity. Its repeated use in Freeman's Journal throughout June 1830 appears to bear reference to his resolute political will, with taints of disapproval from its Irish editors.[178][179][180] During this time, Wellington was greeted by a hostile reaction from the crowds at the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway.[181]

Wellington's government fell in 1830. In the summer and autumn of that year, a wave of riots swept the country.[182] The Whigs had been out of power for most years since the 1770s, and saw political reform in response to the unrest as the key to their return. Wellington stuck to the Tory policy of no reform and no expansion of suffrage, and as a result, lost a vote of no confidence on 15 November 1830.[183]

The Whigs introduced the first Reform Bill while Wellington and the Tories worked to prevent its passage. The Whigs could not get the bill past its second reading in the British House of Commons, and the attempt failed. An election followed in direct response and the Whigs were returned with a landslide majority. A second Reform Act was introduced and passed in the House of Commons but was defeated in the Tory-controlled House of Lords. Another wave of near-insurrection swept the country. Wellington's residence at Apsley House was targeted by a mob of demonstrators on 27 April 1831 and again on 12 October, leaving his windows smashed.[184] Iron shutters were installed in June 1832 to prevent further damage by crowds angry over rejection of the Reform Bill, which he strongly opposed.[185] The Whig Government fell in 1832 and Wellington was unable to form a Tory Government partly because of a run on the Bank of England. This left King William IV no choice but to restore Earl Grey to the premiership. Eventually, the bill passed the House of Lords after the King threatened to fill that House with newly created Whig peers if it were not. Wellington was never reconciled to the change; when Parliament first met after the first election under the widened franchise, Wellington is reported to have said "I never saw so many shocking bad hats in my life".[186]

Wellington opposed the Jewish Civil Disabilities Repeal Bill, and he stated in Parliament on 1 August 1833 that England "is a Christian country and a Christian legislature, and that the effect of this measure would be to remove that peculiar character." The Bill was defeated by 104 votes to 54.[187]

Government

 
Daguerreotype of Wellington, aged 74 or 75, by Antoine Claudet, 1844

Wellington was gradually superseded as leader of the Tories by Robert Peel, while the party evolved into the Conservatives. When the Tories were returned to power in 1834, Wellington declined to become prime minister because he thought membership in the House of Commons had become essential. The king reluctantly approved Peel, who was in Italy. Hence, Wellington acted as interim leader for three weeks in November and December 1834, taking the responsibilities of prime minister and most of the other ministries.[188] In Peel's first cabinet (1834–1835), Wellington became foreign secretary, while in the second (1841–1846) he was a minister without portfolio and Leader of the House of Lords.[189] Wellington was also re-appointed Commander-in-Chief of the British Army on 15 August 1842 following the resignation of Lord Hill.[190]

Wellington served as the leader of the Conservative party in the House of Lords from 1828 to 1846. Some historians have belittled him as a befuddled reactionary, but a consensus in the late 20th century depicts him as a shrewd operator who hid his cleverness behind the façade of a poorly informed old soldier. Wellington worked to transform the Lords from unstinting support of the Crown to an active player in political manoeuvring, with a commitment to the landed aristocracy. He used his London residence as a venue for intimate dinners and private consultations, together with extensive correspondence that kept him in close touch with party leaders in the Commons, and the main persona in the Lords. He gave public rhetorical support to Ultra-Tory anti-reform positions, but then deftly changed positions toward the party's centre, especially when Peel needed support from the upper house. Wellington's success was based on the 44 elected peers from Scotland and Ireland, whose elections he controlled.[191]

Later life

Family

 
Portrait miniature of an elderly Wellington, by Robert Thorburn

Wellesley was married by his brother Gerald, a clergyman, to Kitty Pakenham in St George's Church, Dublin on 10 April 1806.[192] They had two children: Arthur was born in 1807 and Charles was born in 1808. The marriage proved unsatisfactory and the two spent years apart, while Wellesley was campaigning and afterwards. Kitty grew depressed, and Wellesley pursued other sexual and romantic partners.[99][193] The couple largely lived apart, with Kitty spending most of her time at their country home, Stratfield Saye House and Wellesley at their London home, Apsley House. Kitty's brother Edward Pakenham served under Wellesley throughout the Peninsular War, and Wellesley's regard for him helped to smooth his relations with Kitty, until Pakenham's death at the Battle of New Orleans in 1815.[194]

Retirement

Wellington retired from political life in 1846, although he remained Commander-in-Chief, and returned briefly to the public eye in 1848 when he helped organise a military force to protect London during the year of European revolution.[195] The Conservative Party had split over the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846, with Wellington and most of the former Cabinet still supporting Peel, but most of the MPs led by Lord Derby supporting a protectionist stance. Early in 1852 Wellington, by then very deaf, gave Derby's first government its nickname by shouting "Who? Who?" as the list of inexperienced Cabinet ministers was read out in the House of Lords.[196] He became Chief Ranger and Keeper of Hyde Park and St James's Park on 31 August 1850.[197] He remained colonel of the 33rd Regiment of Foot from 1 February 1806[198] and colonel of the Grenadier Guards from 22 January 1827.[199] Kitty died of cancer in 1831; despite their generally unhappy relations, which had led to an effective separation, Wellington was said to have been greatly saddened by her death, his one comfort being that after "half a lifetime together, they had come to understand each other at the end".[200] He had found consolation for his unhappy marriage in his warm friendship with the diarist Harriet Arbuthnot, wife of his colleague Charles Arbuthnot.[201] Harriet's death in the cholera epidemic of 1834 was almost as great a blow to Wellington as it was to her husband.[202] The two widowers spent their last years together at Apsley House.[203]

Death and funeral

 
Wellesley's funeral procession passing Wellington Arch and Apsley House

Wellington died at Walmer Castle in Kent, his residence as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and reputedly his favourite home, on 14 September 1852. He was found to be unwell on that morning and was helped from his campaign bed, which he had used throughout his military career, and seated in his chair where he died. His death was recorded as being due to the after-effects of a stroke culminating in a series of seizures. He was aged 83.[204][184]

 
Wellington's tomb, in St Paul's Cathedral, London

Although in life he hated travelling by rail, having witnessed the death of William Huskisson, one of the first railway accident casualties, his body was taken by train to London, where he was given a state funeral – one of a small number of British subjects to be so honoured (other examples include Lord Nelson and Sir Winston Churchill). The funeral took place on 18 November 1852.[205][206] Before the funeral, the Duke's body lay in state at the Royal Hospital Chelsea. Members of the royal family, including Queen Victoria, the Prince Consort, the Prince of Wales, and the Princess Royal, visited to pay their respects. When viewing opened to the public, crowds thronged to visit and several people were killed in the crush.[207]

He was buried in St Paul's Cathedral, and during his funeral, there was little space to stand due to the number of attendees.[208] A bronze memorial was sculpted by Alfred Stevens, and features two intricate supports: "Truth tearing the tongue out of the mouth of False-hood", and "Valour trampling Cowardice underfoot". Stevens did not live to see it placed in its home under one of the arches of the cathedral.[209]

 
A bronze statue of Wellington by Carlo Marochetti in Woodhouse Moor, Leeds

Wellington's casket was decorated with banners which were made for his funeral procession. Originally, there was one from Prussia, which was removed during World War I and never reinstated.[210] In the procession, the "Great Banner" was carried by General Sir James Charles Chatterton of the 4th Dragoon Guards on the orders of Queen Victoria.[211]

Most of the book A Biographical Sketch of the Military and Political Career of the Late Duke of Wellington by Weymouth newspaper proprietor Joseph Drew is a detailed contemporary account of his death, lying in state and funeral.[212]

After his death, Irish and English newspapers disputed whether Wellington had been born an Irishman or an Englishman.[213] In 2002, he was number 15 in the BBC's poll of the 100 Greatest Britons.[214]

Owing to its links with Wellington, as the former commanding officer and colonel of the regiment, the title "33rd (The Duke of Wellington's) Regiment" was granted to the 33rd Regiment of Foot, on 18 June 1853 (the 38th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo) by Queen Victoria.[215] Wellington's battle record is exemplary; he participated in some 60 battles during the course of his military career.[216]

Personality

 
The Duke of Wellington, c. 1850

Wellington always rose early; he "couldn't bear to lie awake in bed", even if the army was not on the march.[217] Even when he returned to civilian life after 1815, he slept in a camp bed, reflecting his lack of regard for creature comforts. General Miguel de Álava complained that Wellington said so often that the army would march "at daybreak" and dine on "cold meat" that he began to dread those two phrases.[218] While on campaign, he seldom ate anything between breakfast and dinner. During the retreat to Portugal in 1811, he subsisted on "cold meat and bread", to the despair of his staff who dined with him.[219] He was, however, renowned for the quality of the wine that he drank and served, often drinking a bottle with his dinner (not a great quantity by the standards of his day).[220]

Álava was a witness to an incident just before the Battle of Salamanca. Wellington was eating a chicken leg while observing the manoeuvres of the French army through a spyglass. He spotted an overextension in the French left flank, and realised that he could launch a successful attack there. He exclaimed "By God, that will do!" and threw the drumstick in the air.[221] After the Battle of Toulouse, Colonel Frederick Ponsonby brought him the news of Napoleon's abdication, and Wellington broke into an impromptu flamenco dance, spinning around on his heels and clicking his fingers.[222]

 
Plaster model, located at the Victoria and Albert Museum, of the 'Valour and Cowardice' motif used in the memorial to Wellington at St. Paul's Cathedral

Military historian Charles Dalton recorded that, after a hard-fought battle in Spain, a young officer made the comment, "I am going to dine with Wellington tonight", which was overheard by the Duke as he rode by. "Give me at least the prefix of Mr. before my name," Wellington said. "My Lord," replied the officer, "we do not speak of Mr. Caesar or Mr. Alexander, so why should I speak of Mr. Wellington?"[223]

While known for his stern countenance and iron-handed discipline, Wellington was by no means unfeeling. While he is said to have disapproved of soldiers cheering as "too nearly an expression of opinion".[224] Wellington nevertheless cared for his men: he refused to pursue the French after the battles of Porto and Salamanca, foreseeing an inevitable cost to his army in chasing a diminished enemy through rough terrain. The only time that he ever showed grief in public was after the storming of Badajoz: he cried at the sight of the British dead in the breaches.[121]In this context, his famous despatch after the Battle of Vitoria, calling them the "scum of the earth" can be seen to be fuelled as much by disappointment at their breaking ranks as by anger. He shed tears after Waterloo on the presentation of the list of British fallen by Dr John Hume. Later with his family, unwilling to be congratulated for his victory, he broke down in tears, his fighting spirit diminished by the high cost of the battle and great personal loss.[225]

Wellington's soldier servant, a gruff German called Beckerman, and his long-serving valet, James Kendall, who served him for 25 years and was with him when he died, were both devoted to him.[226] (A story that he never spoke to his servants and preferred instead to write his orders on a notepad on his dressing table in fact probably refers to his son, the 2nd Duke. It was recorded by the 3rd Duke's niece, Viva Seton Montgomerie (1879–1959), as being an anecdote she heard from an old retainer, Charles Holman, who was said greatly to resemble Napoleon.)[227]

Following an incident when, as Master-General of the Ordnance he had been close to a large explosion, Wellington began to experience deafness and other ear-related problems. In 1822, he had an operation to improve the hearing of the left ear. The result, however, was that he became permanently deaf on that side. It is claimed that he was "never quite well afterwards".[184]

Perhaps because of his unhappy marriage, Wellington came to enjoy the company of a variety of intellectual and attractive women and had many amorous liaisons, particularly after the Battle of Waterloo and his subsequent ambassadorial position in Paris. In the days following Waterloo he had an affair with the notorious Lady Caroline Lamb, sister of one of his severely wounded officers and favourites, Col Frederick Ponsonby. He corresponded for many years with Lady Georgiana Lennox, later Lady de Ros, 26 years his junior and daughter of the Duchess of Richmond (who held the famous ball on the eve of Waterloo) and, though there are hints, it has not been clearly determined if the relationship was ever sexual.[228] The British press lampooned the amorous side of the national hero.[193] In 1824, one liaison came back to haunt him, when Wellington received a letter from a publisher, John Joseph Stockdale offering to refrain from issuing an edition of the rather racy memoirs of one of his mistresses Harriette Wilson, in exchange for money. It is said that the Duke promptly returned the letter, after scrawling across it, "Publish and be damned".[229] However, Hibbert notes in his biography that the letter can be found among the Duke's papers, with nothing written on it.[230] It is certain that Wellington did reply, and the tone of a further letter from the publisher, quoted by Longford, suggests that he had refused in the strongest language to submit to blackmail.[231]

He was also a remarkably practical man who spoke concisely. In 1851, it was discovered that there were a great many sparrows flying about in the Crystal Palace just before the Great Exhibition was to open. His advice to Queen Victoria was "Sparrowhawks, ma'am".[232]

Wellington has often been portrayed as a defensive general, even though many, perhaps most, of his battles were offensive (Argaum, Assaye, Oporto, Salamanca, Vitoria, Toulouse). However, for most of the Peninsular War, where he earned his fame, his army lacked the numbers for a strategically offensive posture.[233]

Titles and tributes

Nicknames

 
Apsley House in 1829, by Thomas H. Shepherd
 
Sir John Steell's equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington – 'the Iron Duke in bronze by Steell' Edinburgh 1852

The Iron Duke

This commonly used nickname originally related to his consistent political resolve rather than to any particular incident. In various cases its editorial use appears to be disparaging.[178][179][180]

It is likely that its use became more widespread after an incident in 1832 in which he installed metal shutters to prevent rioters breaking windows at Apsley House.[185][234] The term may have been made increasingly popular by Punch cartoons published in 1844–45.[235][236]

Other nicknames

  • In the popular ballads of the day Wellington was called "Nosey" or "Old Nosey".[237]
  • Tsar Alexander I of Russia called Wellington "Le vainqueur du vainqueur du monde", the conqueror of the world's conqueror, the phrase "the world's conqueror" referring to Napoleon.[238] Lord Tennyson uses a similar reference in his "Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington", referring to him as "the great World-victor's victor".[239]
  • Officers under his command called him "The Beau", as he was a fine dresser.[240]
  • Spanish troops called him "The Eagle", while Portuguese troops called him "Douro Douro" after his river crossing at Oporto in 1809.[241]
  • "Beau Douro"; Wellington found this amusing when hearing it used by a Colonel of the Coldstream Guards.[240]
  • "Sepoy General"; Napoleon used this term as an insult to Wellington's military service in India, publicly considering him an unworthy opponent. The name was used in the French newspaper Le Moniteur Universel, as a means of propaganda.[242]
  • "The Beef"; It is a theory that the Beef Wellington dish is a reference to Wellington, although some chefs dispute this.[243]
  • "Europe's Liberator"[244]
  • "Saviour of the Nations"[244]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Though 29 April is considered as more likely by some other earlier biographers, including Ernest Marsh Lloyd, writing in the Dictionary of National Biography with some sources to support that view, [6] Norman Gash writing in the more modern Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, on balance supports 1 May.[7]
  2. ^ see Bassford, Moran & Pedlow (2010) for details..

Citations

  1. ^ Gifford (1817), p. 375.
  2. ^ Wellesley (2008), p. 16.
  3. ^ Longford (1971), p. 53.
  4. ^ Severn (2007), p. 13.
  5. ^ History of Parliament (2013).
  6. ^ Lloyd (1899), p. 170.
  7. ^ a b Gash (2011).
  8. ^ Artware Fine Art (2020).
  9. ^ Guedalla (1997), p. 480.
  10. ^ Wellesley (2008), p. 16 "Anne Mornington insisted that she remembered the details: 1 May 1769, at 6 Merrion Street, Dublin – an elegant new townhouse round the corner from St Stephen's Green, the largest public square in Europe."
  11. ^ Longford (1971), p. 14 says, "there is no valid argument" for this choice
  12. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 6–7.
  13. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 8.
  14. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 9.
  15. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 19–20.
  16. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 20.
  17. ^ a b c Holmes (2002), p. 21.
  18. ^ "No. 12836". The London Gazette. 6 March 1787. p. 118.
  19. ^ "No. 12959". The London Gazette. 26 January 1788. p. 47.
  20. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 22.
  21. ^ "No. 12958". The London Gazette. 22 January 1788. p. 40.
  22. ^ "No. 13121". The London Gazette. 8 August 1789. p. 539.
  23. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 23.
  24. ^ a b c Holmes (2002), p. 24.
  25. ^ Duke of Wellington's Regiment (2006).
  26. ^ "No. 13347". The London Gazette. 27 September 1791. p. 542.
  27. ^ "No. 13488". The London Gazette. 25 December 1792. p. 976.
  28. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 25.
  29. ^ Number10 (2011).
  30. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 26.
  31. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 27.
  32. ^ "No. 13542". The London Gazette. 29 June 1793. p. 555.
  33. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 28.
  34. ^ "No. 13596". The London Gazette. 23 November 1793. p. 1052.
  35. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 30.
  36. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 31.
  37. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 32.
  38. ^ a b c Holmes (2002), p. 33.
  39. ^ "No. 13892". The London Gazette. 14 May 1796. p. 460.
  40. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 34.
  41. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 40.
  42. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 41.
  43. ^ Longford (1971), p. 54.
  44. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 42.
  45. ^ Forrest (1970), p. 283.
  46. ^ a b c d Holmes (2002), p. 58.
  47. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 49.
  48. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 44.
  49. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 47.
  50. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 51.
  51. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 53.
  52. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 63.
  53. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 56.
  54. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 57.
  55. ^ Macquarie University (2008).
  56. ^ Bowring (1893), pp. 84–85.
  57. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 59.
  58. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 60.
  59. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 62.
  60. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 67.
  61. ^ Jerdan et al. (1832).
  62. ^ Intelligence Branch (1911), pp. 8–20.
  63. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 64.
  64. ^ Weller (1993), p. 88.
  65. ^ a b Davies (2012), p. 22.
  66. ^ Weller (1993), pp. 94–96.
  67. ^ a b Weller (1993), p. 97.
  68. ^ Davies (2012), pp. 33, 38.
  69. ^ Wellesley (1852), pp. 181, 190.
  70. ^ Davies (2012), p. 34.
  71. ^ Wellesley (1852), pp. 191.
  72. ^ a b Weller (1993), p. 99.
  73. ^ Davies (2012), pp. 37–38.
  74. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 65.
  75. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 69.
  76. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 73.
  77. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 69, 73.
  78. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 74.
  79. ^ a b c Holmes (2002), p. 81.
  80. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 75.
  81. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 77.
  82. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 80.
  83. ^ Longford (1971), p. 93.
  84. ^ Millar (2006), p. 82.
  85. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 82.
  86. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 83.
  87. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 88.
  88. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 87.
  89. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 86.
  90. ^ a b c Holmes (2002), p. 84.
  91. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 85.
  92. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 92.
  93. ^ Australian Broadcasting Corporation (2005).
  94. ^ Lambert (2005), p. 283.
  95. ^ Roberts (2003a), p. xxiii.
  96. ^ a b c d Neillands (2003), p. 38.
  97. ^ "No. 15908". The London Gazette. 8 April 1806. p. 449.
  98. ^ a b Longford (1971), p. 174.
  99. ^ a b c d Neillands (2003), p. 39.
  100. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 102–103.
  101. ^ a b Longford (1971), pp. 148–154.
  102. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 124.
  103. ^ Longford (1971), p. 171.
  104. ^ Longford (1971), p. 172.
  105. ^ Longford (1971), p. 117.
  106. ^ Griffiths (1897).
  107. ^ Longford (2012), p. 118.
  108. ^ Gates (2002), p. 177.
  109. ^ Guedalla (1997), p. 186.
  110. ^ Longford (2012), p. 134.
  111. ^ Longford (2012), pp. 134–150.
  112. ^ a b Muir (2013), p. 343.
  113. ^ "No. 16291". The London Gazette. 22 August 1809. p. 1342.
  114. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 225–230.
  115. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 235–240.
  116. ^ Longford (2012), p. 163.
  117. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 251–254.
  118. ^ Longford (1971), p. 257.
  119. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 254–256.
  120. ^ Longford (1971), p. 168.
  121. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 162.
  122. ^ "No. 16576". The London Gazette. 18 February 1812. p. 335.
  123. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 283–287.
  124. ^ "No. 16636". The London Gazette. 18 August 1812. p. 1677.
  125. ^ Gates (2002), p. 366: "While, in view of the developing strategic situation, is not clear what Wellesley hoped to gain by its seizure, he had resolved to take the fortress—a task which he evidently believed could be easily accomplished; for, notwithstanding the sanguinary lessons that virtually all his sieges had given him and the availability of scores of heavy cannon captured at Ciudad Rodrigo and Madrid, he brought up only eight heavy guns to breach the defences. This force was to prove lamentably inadequate and, in this and other aspects of the operation, Wellesley's complacency and ineptitude were to cost his troops dear."
  126. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 297–299.
  127. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 189.
  128. ^ Wellington to Bathurst, dispatches, p. 496.
  129. ^ Haythornthwaite (1998), p. 7.
  130. ^ Longford (1971), p. 332.
  131. ^ "No. 16934". The London Gazette. 13 September 1814. p. 1850.
  132. ^ Longford (1971), p. 336.
  133. ^ "No. 16934". The London Gazette. 13 September 1814. p. 1851.
  134. ^ Longford (1971), p. 342.
  135. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 344–345.
  136. ^ Longford (2012), p. 228.
  137. ^ "No. 16894". The London Gazette. 3 May 1814. p. 936.
  138. ^ Cornwell (2009).
  139. ^ Bicât (2003), p. 65–66.
  140. ^ Mills (1921), p. 22.
  141. ^ "No. 16915". The London Gazette. 9 July 1814. p. 1389.
  142. ^ "No. 16972". The London Gazette. 4 January 1815. p. 18.
  143. ^ Barbero (2005), p. 2.
  144. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 396–407.
  145. ^ Longford (1971), p. 410.
  146. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 423–432.
  147. ^ Hibbert (1997), pp. 175–176.
  148. ^ Adkin (2001), p. 37.
  149. ^ McGreevy (2015).
  150. ^ a b Chisholm (1911).
  151. ^ a b Siborne (1990), p. 439.
  152. ^ Summerville (2007), p. 315.
  153. ^ Hofschröer (1999), p. 117.
  154. ^ a b Hofschröer (1999), p. 122.
  155. ^ Chandler (1987), p. 373.
  156. ^ Adkin (2001), p. 361.
  157. ^ a b c Chesney (1907), pp. 178–179.
  158. ^ a b Parry (1900), p. 70.
  159. ^ Great Britain Foreign Office (1838), p. 280.
  160. ^ Cawthorne (2015), p. 90.
  161. ^ Adkin (2001), p. 49.
  162. ^ Moran (2010).
  163. ^ Bassford (2010).
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  165. ^ "No. 17525". The London Gazette. 16 October 1819. p. 1831.
  166. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 268.
  167. ^ "No. 18327". The London Gazette. 23 January 1827. p. 153.
  168. ^ "No. 18335". The London Gazette. 13 February 1827. p. 340.
  169. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 270–271.
  170. ^ "No. 18543". The London Gazette. 23 January 1829. p. 129.
  171. ^ Bloy (2011a).
  172. ^ Hansard (1811).
  173. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 277.
  174. ^ Thompson (1986), p. 95.
  175. ^ a b Holmes (2002), p. 275.
  176. ^ King's College London (2008).
  177. ^ Literary Gazette (1829).
  178. ^ a b Freeman's Journal (1830a): "Notes: If the Irish Question be lost, Ireland has her Representatives to accuse for it still more than the iron Duke and his worthy Chancellor"
  179. ^ a b Freeman's Journal (1830b): "Notes: "One fortnight will force the Iron Duke to abandon his project"
  180. ^ a b Freeman's Journal (1830c): "Notes: "Let the 'Iron Duke' abandon the destructive scheme of Goulburn."
  181. ^ Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1830).
  182. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 281.
  183. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 283.
  184. ^ a b c Bloy (2011b).
  185. ^ a b Freeman's Journal (1832): "Notes: iron shutters are being fixed, of a strength and substance sufficient to resist a musket ball"
  186. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 288.
  187. ^ Wellesley (1854), p. 671–674.
  188. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 289.
  189. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 291–292.
  190. ^ "No. 20130". The London Gazette. 16 August 1842. p. 2217.
  191. ^ Davis (2003), pp. 43–55.
  192. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 96.
  193. ^ a b BBC (2015).
  194. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 206.
  195. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 292.
  196. ^ Bloy (2011c).
  197. ^ "No. 21132". The London Gazette. 3 September 1850. p. 2396.
  198. ^ "No. 15885". The London Gazette. 28 January 1806. p. 128.
  199. ^ "No. 18327". The London Gazette. 23 January 1827. p. 154.
  200. ^ Longford (1971), p. 281.
  201. ^ Longford (1971), p. 95.
  202. ^ Longford (1971), p. 296.
  203. ^ Longford (1971), p. 297.
  204. ^ Corrigan (2006), p. 353.
  205. ^ The Times (1852a); also see The Times (1852b)
  206. ^ "No. 21381". The London Gazette. 16 November 1852. p. 3079.
  207. ^ Walford (1878).
  208. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 297–298.
  209. ^ Victoria and Albert Museum (2014).
  210. ^ Saint Paul's Cathedral (2011).
  211. ^ Dalton (1904), p. 77.
  212. ^ Drew (1852).
  213. ^ Sinnema (2006), p. 93–111.
  214. ^ Cooper & Boycott (2002), p. 13.
  215. ^ Duke of Wellington's Regiment (2014).
  216. ^ Roberts (2003b).
  217. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 177.
  218. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 175.
  219. ^ Hibbert (1997), p. 111.
  220. ^ Longford (1971), p. 356.
  221. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 166.
  222. ^ Glover (2001), p. 334.
  223. ^ Dalton (1904), p. 9.
  224. ^ Gere (1981), p. 5.
  225. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 250, 254.
  226. ^ Holmes (2002), p. 301.
  227. ^ Montgomerie (1955), p. 31.
  228. ^ Crossland (2016), p. 13.
  229. ^ Cathcart (1994).
  230. ^ Hibbert (1997), p. 390.
  231. ^ Longford (1971), pp. 211–212.
  232. ^ Holmes (2002), p. xvi.
  233. ^ Rothenberg (1999), p. 136.
  234. ^ "BBC History". Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  235. ^ R.E.Foster. "Mr Punch and the Iron Duke". Retrieved 29 May 2011.
  236. ^ Holmes (2002), pp. 285–288, 302–303.
  237. ^ Rory Muir (2013). Wellington: Waterloo and the fortunes of peace, 1814–1852. p. 472. ISBN 9780300187861.
  238. ^ Cornwell, Bernard (2014). Waterloo – The History of Four Days, Three Armies and Three Battles. p. 10.
  239. ^ Alfred Lord Tennyson (1900). Tennyson: Including Lotos Eaters, Ulysses, Ode on the Death, Maud, The Coming and the Passing of Arthur. p. 10.
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  241. ^ Morgan (2004), p. 135.
  242. ^ Roberts (2003a), pp. 74, 78–79.
  243. ^ Scott & Wright (2006), p. 26.
  244. ^ a b . Prime Minister's Office. Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 31 July 2008.

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  • Longford, Elizabeth (2012). Wellington. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0349123509.
  • Millar, Simon (2006). Assaye 1803: Wellington's Bloodiest Battle. Osprey. ISBN 978-1846030017.
  • Montgomerie, Viva Seton (1955). My Scrapbook of Memories. Privately published.
  • Moran, Daniel (2010). "Clausewitz on Waterloo:Napoleon at Bay". On Waterloo: Clausewitz, Wellington, and the Campaign of 1815. By Clausewitz, Carl von; Wellesley, Arthur, First Duke of Wellington. Christopher Bassford; Daniel Moran; Gregory Pedlow (eds.). Clausewitz.com. ISBN 978-1453701508.
  • Morgan, Matthew (2004). Wellington's Victories: A Guide to Sharpe's Army. London: Andrews McMeel Publishing. ISBN 978-1843170938.
  • Muir, Rory (2013). Wellington: The Path to Victory 1769–1814. Vol. 1. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300205480.
  • Neillands, Robin (2003). Wellington & Napoleon: Clash of Arms. Pen & Sword Books. ISBN 978-0850529265.
  • Parry, D.H. (1900). . London: Cassell and Company. Archived from the original on 16 December 2008.
  • Roberts, Andrew (2003a). Napoleon and Wellington: The Long Duel. Phoenix. ISBN 978-0753813904.
  • Rothenberg, Gunther E. (1999). Keegan, John (ed.). The Napoleonic Wars. London: Cassell & Co. ISBN 978-0304352678.
  • Scott, Johnny; Wright, Clarissa D. (2006). Sunday Roast. Kyle Cathie. ISBN 978-1856266727.
  • Severn, John (2007). Architects of Empire: The Duke of Wellington and His Brothers. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806138107.
  • Siborne, William (1990). The Waterloo Campaign. London: Greenhill Books. ISBN 978-1853670695.
  • Sinnema, Peter W. (2006). The Wake of Wellington: Englishness in 1852. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0821416792.
  • Summerville, Christopher J (2007). Who was who at Waterloo: a biography of the battle. Pearson Education. ISBN 978-0582784055.
  • Thompson, Neville (1986). Wellington after Waterloo. Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0710207470.
  • Weller, Jac (1993) [1972]. Wellington in India. London: Greenhill Books. ISBN 978-1853673979..
  • Wellesley, Jane (2008). Wellington: A Journey Through My Family. London: Orion Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0297852315.
Online resources
  • "Portrait of Arthur Wellesley (1769–1852), 1st Duke of Wellington". Artware Fine Art. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  • "Ockham's Razor: 16 October 2005 – Horatio Nelson: 200th Anniversary of Trafalgar". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 16 October 2005. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  • "Wellington: The Iron Duke Unmasked". BBC. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  • Bloy, Marjorie (2011a). "The Peel Web-Wellington's speeches on Catholic Emancipation". A Web of English History. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
  • Bloy, Marjorie (2011b). "Biography-Arthur Wellesley, first Duke of Wellington (1769–1852)". A Web of English History. from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  • Bloy, Marjorie (2011c). "Biography-Edward George Geoffrey Smith Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby (1799–1869)". A Web of English History. from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
  • Cathcart, Brian (20 March 1994). "When Wellington said publish and be damned: The Field Marshal and the Scarlet Woman". The Independent. London. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  • Walford, Edward (1878). "Chelsea: The Hospital". Old and New London, Originally published by Cassell, Petter & Galpin. Vol. 5. London: British History Online. pp. 70–84..
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Waterloo Campaign" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 371–381.
  • Cornwell, Cornwell. . Bernard Cornwell. Archived from the original on 11 June 2010. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
  • . Duke of Wellington's Regiment (West Riding). Archived from the original on 27 April 2006. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  • . Duke of Wellington's Regiment (West Riding). Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  • Great Britain Foreign Office, Great Britain (1838). British and foreign state papers. H.M.S.O. p. 280. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  • . History of Parliament. Archived from the original on 1 August 2013.
  • . King's College London. Archived from the original on 23 March 2009. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  • . Macquarie University. Archived from the original on 22 July 2008. Retrieved 17 June 2008.
  • McGreevy, Ronan (18 June 2015). "Just how many Irish fought at the Battle of Waterloo?". The Irish Times. Dublin. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  • Mills, Dudley (1921). "The Duke of Wellington and the Peace Negotiations at Ghent in 1814". Canadian Historical Review. 2 (1): 19–32. doi:10.3138/chr-02-01-02. S2CID 161278429.
  • . number10.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved 8 June 2011.
  • Roberts, Andrew. "The Duke of Wellington: Soldiering to Glory". BBC. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  • "Discover the Crypt". St Paul's Cathedral. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  • "Model for Wellington Monument: Truth and Falsehood". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 21 September 2014.

Journals and magazines

  • A Railer (November 1830). "Opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railroad". Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. Edinburgh: William Blackwood. 28 (173): 827.
  • Davis, Richard W. (2003). "Wellington". Parliamentary History. 22 (1).
  • "The Odious Imposts". Freeman's Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser. Dublin, Ireland. 14 June 1830.
  • "County Meetings". Freeman's Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser. Dublin, Ireland. 16 June 1830.
  • "Dublin, Monday, June 28". Freeman's Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser. Dublin, Ireland. 28 June 1830.
  • "London". Freeman's Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser. Dublin, Ireland. 14 June 1832.
  • "Mutiny Bill – Catholic Soldiers". Hansard. XIX. 11 March 1811.
  • "Sketches of society: The late duel". The Literary Gazette and Journal of Belles Lettres, Arts, Sciences. H. Colburn. 1829. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  • Jerdan, William; Workman, William Ring; Morley, John; Arnold, Frederick; Goodwin, Charles Wycliffe (1832). "Raising of the Anglo-Indian army". The Literary Gazette and Journal: 711. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  • "Funeral of the Duke of Wellington [Announcement of arrangements]". The Times. No. 21276. 18 November 1852. p. 5, col A.
  • "Funeral of the Duke of Wellington [Report of the funderal]". The Times. No. 21277. 19 November 1852. p. 5, col A.
Primary sources
  • Wellesley, Arthur (1852). Gurwood, John (ed.). The dispatches of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington: During his various campaigns in India, Denmark, Portugal, Spain, the Low Countries, and France, from 1799 to 1818. Vol. I. London: John Murray.
  • Wellesley, Arthur (1854). The Speeches of the Duke of Wellington in Parliament. Vol. I. London: London: W. Clowes & Sons. pp. 671–674. Retrieved 10 March 2012.

Further reading

  • Brett-James, Antony, ed. (1961). Wellington at War 1794–1815. New York: St. Martin's Press.
  • Bryant, Arthur (1972). The Great Duke: Or, The Invincible General. Morrow. OCLC 410380.
  • von Clausewitz, Carl von; Wellesley, Arthur, First Duke of Wellington (2010), Christopher Bassford; Daniel Moran; Gregory Pedlow (eds.), On Waterloo: Clausewitz, Wellington, and the Campaign of 1815, Clausewitz.com, ISBN 978-1-4537-0150-8 This on-line text contains Clausewitz's 58-chapter study of the Campaign of 1815 and Wellington's lengthy 1842 essay written in response to Clausewitz, as well as supporting documents and essays by the editors.
  • von Clausewitz, Carl (1999) [1827]. "Feldzug von 1815: Strategische Uebersicht des Feldzugs von 1815" [The Campaign of 1815: Strategic Overview of the Campaign of 1815]. In Hahlweg, Werner (ed.). Schriften–Aufsätze–Studien–Briefe [Writings–Essays–Studies–Letters] (in German). Vol. 2. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. pp. 936–1118.
  • Coates, Berwick (2003). Wellington's Charge: A Portrait of the Duke's England. London: Robson Books. ISBN 978-1-86105-653-5.
  • Ellis, Peter Berresford (2000). The Celtic Revolution: A Study in Anti-Imperialism. Talybont, Wales: Y LotraCyf. ISBN 978-0-86243-096-2.
  • Goldsmith, Thomas. "The Duke of Wellington and British Foreign Policy 1814-1830." (PhD Diss. University of East Anglia, 2016). online
  • Harrington, Jack (2011). Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-10885-1.
  • Hilbert, Charles (2005). Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, time and conflicts in India on behalf of the British East India Company and the British crown. 7. Military Heritage.
  • Hutchinson, Lester (1964). European Freebooters in Mogul India. New York: Asia Publishing House.
  • Lambert, A. "Politics, administration and decision-making: Wellington and the navy, 1828–30" Wellington Studies IV, ed. C. M. Woolgar, (Southampton, 2008), pp. 185–243.
  • Longford, Elizabeth. Wellington: Pillar of State (1972), vol 2 of her biography; online
  • Snow, Peter (2010). To War with Wellington, from the Peninsula to Waterloo. London: John Murray. ISBN 978-1-84854-103-0.
  • Ward, S.G.P. (1957). Wellington's Headquarters: A Study of the Administrative Problems in the Peninsula 1809–1814. Oxford University Press.
  • Weller, Jac (1998). Wellington at Waterloo. London: Greenhill Books. ISBN 978-1-85367-339-9.

External links

  • Records and images from the UK Parliament Collections
  • The life of Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington
  • Duke of Wellington's Regiment – West Riding
  • Papers of Arthur Wellesley, first Duke of Wellington (MS 61) at the University of Southampton
  • Works by Arthur Wellesley at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington at Internet Archive
  • Works by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by the Duke of Wellington
  • Portraits of Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • "Archival material relating to Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington". UK National Archives.  
  • "Napoleon and Wellington", BBC Radio 4 discussion with Andrew Roberts, Mike Broer and Belinda Beaton (In Our Time, 25 October 2001)

arthur, wellesley, duke, wellington, duke, wellington, redirects, here, other, uses, duke, wellington, disambiguation, 1769, september, 1852, anglo, irish, soldier, tory, statesman, leading, military, political, figures, 19th, century, britain, serving, twice,. Duke of Wellington redirects here For other uses see Duke of Wellington disambiguation Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington KG GCB GCH PC FRS 1 May 1769 14 September 1852 was an Anglo Irish soldier and Tory statesman who was one of the leading military and political figures of 19th century Britain serving twice as prime minister of the United Kingdom He is among the commanders who won and ended the Napoleonic Wars when the Seventh Coalition defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 Field Marshal His GraceThe Duke of WellingtonKG GCB GCH PC FRSPortrait by Thomas Lawrence c 1815 16Prime Minister of the United KingdomIn office 17 November 1834 9 December 1834MonarchWilliam IVPreceded byThe Viscount MelbourneSucceeded bySir Robert PeelIn office 22 January 1828 16 November 1830MonarchsGeorge IVWilliam IVPreceded byThe Viscount GoderichSucceeded byThe Earl GreyCommander in Chief of the British ArmyIn office 15 August 1842 14 September 1852MonarchVictoriaPreceded byThe Viscount HillSucceeded byThe Viscount HardingeIn office 22 January 1827 22 January 1828MonarchGeorge IVPreceded byThe Duke of York and AlbanySucceeded byThe Viscount HillLeader of the House of LordsIn office 3 September 1841 27 June 1846Prime MinisterSir Robert PeelPreceded byThe Viscount MelbourneSucceeded byThe Marquess of LansdowneIn office 14 November 1834 18 April 1835Prime MinisterSir Robert PeelPreceded byThe Viscount MelbourneSucceeded byThe Viscount MelbourneIn office 22 January 1828 22 November 1830Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byThe Viscount GoderichSucceeded byThe Earl GreyAdditional positionsPersonal detailsBornArthur Wesley1 May 1769Dublin IrelandDied14 September 1852 1852 09 14 aged 83 Walmer EnglandResting placeSt Paul s CathedralPolitical partyTory until 1834 Conservative 1834 onwards SpouseCatherine Pakenham m 1806 died 1831 wbr ChildrenArthurCharlesParentsGarret Wesley 1st Earl of Mornington father Anne Hill Trevor mother AwardsList Knight of the Order of the Garter Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Sword Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece Knight Grand Cross of the Military William Order 1 SignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited KingdomBranch serviceBritish ArmyYears of service1787 1852RankField MarshalBattles warsFlanders Campaign Fourth Anglo Mysore War Second Anglo Maratha War English Wars Peninsular War Cotiote War Waterloo campaignSelected battles Interactive fullscreen map 1799 1803 1807 1813 1815Wellesley was born in Dublin into the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland He was commissioned as an ensign in the British Army in 1787 serving in Ireland as aide de camp to two successive lords lieutenant of Ireland He was also elected as a member of Parliament in the Irish House of Commons He was a colonel by 1796 and saw action in the Netherlands and in India where he fought in the Fourth Anglo Mysore War at the Battle of Seringapatam He was appointed governor of Seringapatam and Mysore in 1799 and as a newly appointed major general won a decisive victory over the Maratha Confederacy at the Battle of Assaye in 1803 Wellesley rose to prominence as a general during the Peninsular campaign of the Napoleonic Wars and was promoted to the rank of field marshal after leading the allied forces to victory against the French Empire at the Battle of Vitoria in 1813 Following Napoleon s exile in 1814 he served as the ambassador to France and was granted a dukedom During the Hundred Days in 1815 he commanded the allied army which together with a Prussian Army under Field Marshal Gebhard von Blucher defeated Napoleon at Waterloo Wellington s battle record is exemplary he ultimately participated in some 60 battles during the course of his military career Wellington is famous for his adaptive defensive style of warfare resulting in several victories against numerically superior forces while minimising his own losses He is regarded as one of the greatest defensive commanders of all time and many of his tactics and battle plans are still studied in military academies around the world After the end of his active military career he returned to politics He was twice British prime minister as a member of the Tory party from 1828 to 1830 and for a little less than a month in 1834 He oversaw the passage of the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 but opposed the Reform Act 1832 He continued as one of the leading figures in the House of Lords until his retirement and remained Commander in Chief of the British Army until his death Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family 1 2 Birth date and place 1 3 Childhood 2 Early military career 2 1 United Kingdom 2 2 Netherlands 2 3 India 2 3 1 Fourth Anglo Mysore War 2 3 1 1 Seringapatam 2 3 1 2 Dhoondiah Waugh insurgency 2 3 2 Second Anglo Maratha War 2 3 2 1 Assaye Argaum and Gawilghur 2 3 2 2 Leaving India 3 Return to Britain 3 1 Meeting Nelson 3 2 War against Denmark Norway 4 Peninsular War 4 1 1808 1809 4 2 1810 1812 4 3 1813 1814 5 Hundred Days 5 1 Facing Napoleon 5 2 Battle of Waterloo 5 3 Controversy 6 Politics 6 1 Prime Minister 6 2 Reform 6 3 Government 7 Later life 7 1 Family 7 2 Retirement 7 3 Death and funeral 8 Personality 9 Titles and tributes 10 Nicknames 10 1 The Iron Duke 10 2 Other nicknames 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Citations 12 3 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life EditFamily Edit Wellesley was born into an aristocratic Anglo Irish family belonging to the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland as The Hon Arthur Wesley 2 Wellesley was born the son of Anne Wellesley Countess of Mornington and Garret Wesley 1st Earl of Mornington His father Garret Wesley was the son of Richard Wesley 1st Baron Mornington and had a short career in politics representing the constituency Trim in the Irish House of Commons before succeeding his father as 2nd Baron Mornington in 1758 Garret Wesley was also an accomplished composer and in recognition of his musical and philanthropic achievements was elevated to the rank of Earl of Mornington in 1760 3 Wellesley s mother was the eldest daughter of Arthur Hill Trevor 1st Viscount Dungannon after whom Wellesley was named 4 Wellesley was the sixth of nine children born to the Earl and Countess of Mornington His siblings included Richard Viscount Wellesley 1760 1842 later 1st Marquess Wellesley 2nd Earl of Mornington Baron Maryborough 5 Birth date and place Edit The exact date and location of Wellesley s birth is not known however biographers mostly follow the same contemporary newspaper evidence which states that he was born on 1 May 1769 a the day before he was baptised in St Peters Church Dublin 8 9 However Lloyd 1899 p 170 states registry of St Peter s Church Dublin shows that he was christened there on 30 April 1769 His baptismal font was donated to St Nahi s Church in Dundrum Dublin in 1914 As to the place of Wellesley s birth he was most likely born at his parents townhouse 24 Upper Merrion Street Dublin now the Merrion Hotel 7 This contrasts with reports that his mother Anne Countess of Mornington recalled in 1815 that he had been born at 6 Merrion Street Dublin 10 Other places have been put forward as the location of his birth including Mornington House the house next door on Upper Merrion as his father had asserted and the Dublin packet boat 11 Childhood Edit Wellesley spent much of his early childhood at his family s ancestral home Dangan Castle in County Meath Ireland engraving 1842 Wellesley spent most of his childhood at his family s two homes the first a large house in Dublin and the second Dangan Castle 3 miles 5 km north of Summerhill in County Meath 12 In 1781 Arthur s father died and his eldest brother Richard inherited his father s earldom 13 He went to the diocesan school in Trim when at Dangan Mr Whyte s Academy when in Dublin and Brown s School in Chelsea when in London He then enrolled at Eton College where he studied from 1781 to 1784 13 His loneliness there caused him to hate it and makes it highly unlikely that he actually said The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton a quotation which is often attributed to him Moreover Eton had no playing fields at the time In 1785 a lack of success at Eton combined with a shortage of family funds due to his father s death forced the young Wellesley and his mother to move to Brussels 14 Until his early twenties Arthur showed little sign of distinction and his mother grew increasingly concerned at his idleness stating I don t know what I shall do with my awkward son Arthur 14 In 1786 Arthur enrolled in the French Royal Academy of Equitation in Angers where he progressed significantly becoming a good horseman and learning French which later proved very useful 15 Upon returning to England later the same year he astonished his mother with his improvement 16 Early military career EditFurther information Military career of Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington United Kingdom Edit Beginning in 1787 Wellesley served at Dublin Castle pictured as aide de camp to two successive Lords Lieutenant of Ireland Despite his new promise Wellesley had yet to find a job and his family was still short of money so upon the advice of his mother his brother Richard asked his friend the Duke of Rutland then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to consider Arthur for a commission in the Army 16 Soon afterward on 7 March 1787 he was gazetted ensign in the 73rd Regiment of Foot 17 18 In October with the assistance of his brother he was assigned as aide de camp on ten shillings a day twice his pay as an ensign to the new Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Lord Buckingham 17 He was also transferred to the new 76th Regiment forming in Ireland and on Christmas Day 1787 was promoted lieutenant 17 19 During his time in Dublin his duties were mainly social attending balls entertaining guests and providing advice to Buckingham While in Ireland he overextended himself in borrowing due to his occasional gambling but in his defence stated that I have often known what it was to be in want of money but I have never got helplessly into debt 20 On 23 January 1788 he transferred into the 41st Regiment of Foot 21 then again on 25 June 1789 he transferred to the 12th Prince of Wales s Regiment of Light Dragoons 22 and according to military historian Richard Holmes he also reluctantly entered politics 20 Shortly before the general election of 1789 he went to the rotten borough of Trim to speak against the granting of the title Freeman of Dublin to the parliamentary leader of the Irish Patriot Party Henry Grattan 23 Succeeding he was later nominated and duly elected as a Member of Parliament MP for Trim in the Irish House of Commons 24 Because of the limited suffrage at the time he sat in a parliament where at least two thirds of the members owed their election to the landowners of fewer than a hundred boroughs 24 Wellesley continued to serve at Dublin Castle voting with the government in the Irish parliament over the next two years He became a captain on 30 January 1791 and was transferred to the 58th Regiment of Foot 24 25 26 On 31 October he transferred to the 18th Light Dragoons 27 and it was during this period that he grew increasingly attracted to Kitty Pakenham the daughter of Edward Pakenham 2nd Baron Longford 28 She was described as being full of gaiety and charm 29 In 1793 he proposed but was turned down by her brother Thomas Earl of Longford who considered Wellesley to be a young man in debt with very poor prospects 30 An aspiring amateur musician Wellesley devastated by the rejection burnt his violins in anger and resolved to pursue a military career in earnest 31 He became a major by purchase in the 33rd Regiment in 1793 28 32 A few months later in September his brother lent him more money and with it he purchased a lieutenant colonelcy in the 33rd 33 34 Netherlands Edit Further information Flanders Campaign Wellesley as Lieutenant Colonel aged c 26 in the 33rd Regiment Portrait by John Hoppner In 1793 the Duke of York was sent to Flanders in command of the British contingent of an allied force destined for the invasion of France In June 1794 Wellesley with the 33rd regiment set sail from Cork bound for Ostend as part of an expedition bringing reinforcements for the army in Flanders They arrived too late to participate and joined the Duke of York as he was pulling back towards the Netherlands On 15 September 1794 at the Battle of Boxtel 35 east of Breda Wellington in temporary command of his brigade had his first experience of battle During General Abercromby s withdrawal in the face of superior French forces the 33rd held off enemy cavalry allowing neighbouring units to retreat safely During the extremely harsh winter that followed Wellesley and his regiment formed part of an allied force holding the defence line along the Waal River The 33rd along with the rest of the army suffered heavy losses from attrition and illness Wellesley s health was also affected by the damp environment 36 Though the campaign was to end disastrously with the British army driven out of the United Provinces into the German states Wellesley became more aware of battle tactics including the use of lines of infantry against advancing columns and the merits of supporting sea power 35 He understood that the failure of the campaign was due in part to the faults of the leaders and the poor organisation at headquarters 37 He remarked later of his time in the Netherlands that At least I learned what not to do and that is always a valuable lesson 37 Returning to England in March 1795 he was reinstated as a member of parliament for Trim for a second time 38 He hoped to be given the position of secretary of war in the new Irish government but the new lord lieutenant Lord Camden was only able to offer him the post of Surveyor General of the Ordnance 38 Declining the post he returned to his regiment now at Southampton preparing to set sail for the West Indies After seven weeks at sea a storm forced the fleet back to Poole 38 The 33rd was given time to recuperate and a few months later Whitehall decided to send the regiment to India Wellesley was promoted full colonel by seniority on 3 May 1796 39 and a few weeks later set sail for Calcutta with his regiment 40 India Edit Arriving in Calcutta in February 1797 he spent 5 months there before being sent in August to a brief expedition to the Philippines where he established a list of new hygiene precautions for his men to deal with the unfamiliar climate 41 Returning in November to India he learnt that his elder brother Richard now known as Lord Mornington had been appointed as the new Governor General of India 42 In 1798 he changed the spelling of his surname to Wellesley up to this time he was still known as Wesley which his eldest brother considered the ancient and proper spelling 42 43 Fourth Anglo Mysore War Edit Main article Fourth Anglo Mysore War Wellesley in India wearing his major general s uniform Portrait by Robert Home 1804 As part of the campaign to extend the rule of the British East India Company the Fourth Anglo Mysore War broke out in 1798 against the Sultan of Mysore Tipu Sultan 44 Arthur s brother Richard ordered that an armed force be sent to capture Seringapatam and defeat Tipu During the war rockets were used on several occasions Wellesley was almost defeated by Tipu s Diwan Purnaiah at the Battle of Sultanpet Tope Quoting Forrest At this point near the village of Sultanpet Figure 5 there was a large tope or grove which gave shelter to Tipu s rocketmen and had obviously to be cleaned out before the siege could be pressed closer to Srirangapattana island The commander chosen for this operation was Col Wellesley but advancing towards the tope after dark on the 5th April 1799 he was set upon with rockets and musket fires lost his way and as Beatson politely puts it had to postpone the attack until a more favourable opportunity should offer 45 The following day Wellesley launched a fresh attack with a larger force and took the whole position without any killed in action 46 On 22 April 1799 twelve days before the main battle rocketeers maneuvered to the rear of the British encampment then threw a great number of rockets at the same instant to signal the beginning of an assault by 6 000 Indian infantry and a corps of Frenchmen all ordered by Mir Golam Hussain and Mohomed Hulleen Mir Miran The rockets had a range of about 1 000 yards Some burst in the air like shells Others called ground rockets would rise again on striking the ground and bound along in a serpentine motion until their force was spent According to one British observer a young English officer named Bayly So pestered were we with the rocket boys that there was no moving without danger from the destructive missiles He continued 46 The rockets and musketry from 20 000 of the enemy were incessant No hail could be thicker Every illumination of blue lights was accompanied by a shower of rockets some of which entered the head of the column passing through to the rear causing death wounds and dreadful lacerations from the long bamboos of twenty or thirty feet which are invariably attached to them Under the command of General Harris some 24 000 troops were dispatched to Madras to join an equal force being sent from Bombay in the west 47 Arthur and the 33rd sailed to join them in August 48 After extensive and careful logistic preparation which would become one of Wellesley s main attributes 49 the 33rd left with the main force in December and travelled across 250 miles 402 km of jungle from Madras to Mysore 49 On account of his brother during the journey Wellesley was given an additional command that of chief advisor to the Nizam of Hyderabad s army sent to accompany the British force 47 This position was to cause friction among many of the senior officers some of whom were senior to Wellesley 50 Much of this friction was put to rest after the Battle of Mallavelly some 20 miles 32 km from Seringapatam in which Harris army attacked a large part of the sultan s army During the battle Wellesley led his men in a line of battle of two ranks against the enemy to a gentle ridge and gave the order to fire 51 After an extensive repetition of volleys followed by a bayonet charge the 33rd in conjunction with the rest of Harris s force forced Tipu s infantry to retreat 52 Seringapatam Edit Immediately after their arrival at Seringapatam on 5 April 1799 the Battle of Seringapatam began and Wellesley was ordered to lead a night attack on the village of Sultanpettah adjacent to the fortress to clear the way for the artillery 53 Because of a variety of factors including the Mysorean army s strong defensive preparations and the darkness the attack failed with 25 casualties due to confusion among the British Wellesley suffered a minor injury to his knee from a spent musket ball 54 55 Although they would re attack successfully the next day after time to scout ahead the enemy s positions the affair affected Wellesley He resolved never to attack an enemy who is preparing and strongly posted and whose posts have not been reconnoitred by daylight 46 Lewin Bentham Bowring gives this alternative account One of these groves called the Sultanpet Tope was intersected by deep ditches watered from a channel running in an easterly direction about a mile from the fort General Baird was directed to scour this grove and dislodge the enemy but on his advancing with this object on the night of the 5th he found the tope unoccupied The next day however the Mysore troops again took possession of the ground and as it was absolutely necessary to expel them two columns were detached at sunset for the purpose The first of these under Colonel Shawe got possession of a ruined village which it successfully held The second column under Colonel Wellesley on advancing into the tope was at once attacked in the darkness of night by a tremendous fire of musketry and rockets The men floundering about amidst the trees and the water courses at last broke and fell back in disorder some being killed and a few taken prisoners In the confusion Colonel Wellesley was himself struck on the knee by a spent ball and narrowly escaped falling into the hands of the enemy 56 A few weeks later after extensive artillery bombardment a breach was opened in the main walls of the fortress of Seringapatam 46 An attack led by Major General Baird secured the fortress Wellesley secured the rear of the advance posting guards at the breach and then stationed his regiment at the main palace 57 After hearing news of the death of the Tipu Sultan Wellesley was the first at the scene to confirm his death checking his pulse 58 Over the coming day Wellesley grew increasingly concerned over the lack of discipline among his men who drank and pillaged the fortress and city To restore order several soldiers were flogged and four hanged 59 After battle and the resulting end of the war the main force under General Harris left Seringapatam and Wellesley aged 30 stayed behind to command the area as the new Governor of Seringapatam and Mysore While in India Wellesley was ill for a considerable time first with severe diarrhoea from the water and then with fever followed by a serious skin infection caused by trichophyton 60 Wellesley was in charge of raising an Anglo Indian expeditionary force in Trincomali in early 1801 61 for the capture of Batavia and Mauritius from the French However on the eve of its departure orders arrived from England that it was to be sent to Egypt to co operate with Sir Ralph Abercromby in the expulsion of the French from Egypt Wellesley had been appointed second in command to Baird but owing to ill health did not accompany the expedition on 9 April 1801 This was fortunate for Wellesley since the very vessel on which he was to have sailed sank in the Red Sea 62 He was promoted to brigadier general on 17 July 1801 He took residence within the Sultan s summer palace and reformed the tax and justice systems in his province to maintain order and prevent bribery 52 He also defeated the rebel warlord Dhoondiah Waugh in the Battle of Conaghull after the latter had escaped from prison in Seringapatam during the battle there 63 Dhoondiah Waugh insurgency Edit In 1800 whilst serving as Governor of Mysore Wellesley was tasked with putting down an insurgency led by Dhoondiah Waugh formerly a Patan trooper for Tipu Sultan 64 After the fall of Seringapatam he became a powerful brigand raiding villages along the Maratha Mysore border region Despite initial setbacks the East India Company having pursued and destroyed his forces once already forcing him into retreat in August 1799 he raised a sizeable force composed of disbanded Mysore soldiers captured small outposts and forts in Mysore and was receiving the support of several Maratha killedars opposed to British occupation 65 This drew the attention of the British administration who were beginning to recognise him as more than just a bandit as his raids expansion and threats to destabilise British authority suddenly increased in 1800 66 The death of Tipu Sultan had created a power vacuum and Waugh was seeking to fill it 65 Given independent command of a combined East India Company and British Army force 67 Wellesley ventured north to confront Waugh in June 1800 with an army of 8 000 infantry and cavalry having learnt that Waugh s forces numbered over 50 000 although the majority around 30 000 were irregular light cavalry and unlikely to pose a serious threat to British infantry and artillery 68 Throughout June August 1800 Wellesley advanced through Waugh s territory his troops escalading forts in turn and capturing each one with trifling loss 69 The forts generally offered little resistance due to their poor construction and design 67 Wellesley did not have sufficient troops to garrison each fort and had to clear the surrounding area of insurgents before advancing to the next fort 70 On 31 July he had taken and destroyed Dhoondiah s baggage and six guns and driven into the Malpoorba where they were drowned about five thousand people 71 Dhoondiah continued to retreat but his forces were rapidly deserting he had no infantry and due to the monsoon weather flooding river crossings he could no longer outpace the British advance 72 On 10 September at the Battle of Conaghul Wellesley personally led a charge of 1 400 British dragoons and Indian cavalry in single line with no reserve against Dhoondiah and his remaining 5 000 cavalry 72 Dhoondiah was killed during the clash his body was discovered and taken to the British camp tied to a cannon With this victory Wellesley s campaign was concluded and British authority had been restored 73 Wellesley with command of four regiments had defeated Dhoondiah s larger rebel force along with Dhoondiah himself who was killed in the final battle Wellesley then paid for the future upkeep of Dhoondiah s orphaned son 74 Second Anglo Maratha War Edit Main article Second Anglo Maratha War In September 1802 Wellesley learnt that he had been promoted to the rank of major general 75 He had been gazetted on 29 April 1802 but the news took several months to reach him by sea He remained at Mysore until November when he was sent to command an army in the Second Anglo Maratha War 75 When he determined that a long defensive war would ruin his army Wellesley decided to act boldly to defeat the numerically larger force of the Maratha Empire 76 With the logistic assembly of his army complete 24 000 men in total he gave the order to break camp and attack the nearest Maratha fort on 8 August 1803 77 The fort surrendered on 12 August after an infantry attack had exploited an artillery made breach in the wall With the fort now in British control Wellesley was able to extend control southwards to the river Godavari 78 Assaye Argaum and Gawilghur Edit Arthur Wellesley mounted at the Battle of Assaye engraving after William Heath Wellesley later remarked that it was his greatest victory 79 Splitting his army into two forces to pursue and locate the main Marathas army the second force commanded by Colonel Stevenson was far smaller Wellesley was preparing to rejoin his forces on 24 September His intelligence however reported the location of the Marathas main army between two rivers near Assaye 80 If he waited for the arrival of his second force the Marathas would be able to mount a retreat so Wellesley decided to launch an attack immediately 80 On 23 September Wellesley led his forces over a ford in the river Kaitna and the Battle of Assaye commenced 81 After crossing the ford the infantry was reorganised into several lines and advanced against the Maratha infantry Wellesley ordered his cavalry to exploit the flank of the Maratha army just near the village 81 During the battle Wellesley himself came under fire two of his horses were shot from under him and he had to mount a third 82 At a crucial moment Wellesley regrouped his forces and ordered Colonel Maxwell later killed in the attack to attack the eastern end of the Maratha position while Wellesley himself directed a renewed infantry attack against the centre 82 An officer in the attack wrote of the importance of Wellesley s personal leadership The General was in the thick of the action the whole time I never saw a man so cool and collected as he was though I can assure you til our troops got the order to advance the fate of the day seemed doubtful 83 With some 6 000 Marathas killed or wounded the enemy was routed though Wellesley s force was in no condition to pursue British casualties were heavy the British losses amounted to 428 killed 1 138 wounded and 18 missing the British casualty figures were taken from Wellesley s own despatch 84 Wellesley was troubled by the loss of men and remarked that he hoped I should not like to see again such loss as I sustained on 23 September even if attended by such gain 79 Years later however he remarked that Assaye and not Waterloo was the best battle he ever fought 79 Despite the damage done to the Maratha army the battle did not end the war 85 A few months later in November Wellesley attacked a larger force near Argaum leading his army to victory again with an astonishing 5 000 enemy dead at the cost of only 361 British casualties 85 A further successful attack at the fortress at Gawilghur combined with the victory of General Lake at Delhi forced the Maratha to sign a peace settlement at Anjangaon not concluded until a year later called the Treaty of Surji Anjangaon 86 Military historian Richard Holmes remarked that Wellesley s experiences in India had an important influence on his personality and military tactics teaching him much about military matters that would prove vital to his success in the Peninsular War 87 These included a strong sense of discipline through drill and order 88 the use of diplomacy to gain allies and the vital necessity of a secure supply line He also established high regard for the acquisition of intelligence through scouts and spies 88 His personal tastes also developed including dressing himself in white trousers a dark tunic with Hessian boots and black cocked hat that later became synonymous as his style 89 Leaving India Edit Major General Wellesley meeting with Nawab Azim ud Daula 1805 Wellesley had grown tired of his time in India remarking I have served as long in India as any man ought who can serve anywhere else 90 In June 1804 he applied for permission to return home and as a reward for his service in India he was made a Knight of the Bath in September 90 While in India Wellesley had amassed a fortune of 42 000 considerable at the time consisting mainly of prize money from his campaign 90 When his brother s term as Governor General of India ended in March 1805 the brothers returned together to England on HMS Howe Wellesley coincidentally stopped on his voyage at the island of Saint Helena and stayed in the same building in which Napoleon I would live during his later exile 91 Return to Britain EditMeeting Nelson Edit In September 1805 Major General Wellesley was newly returned from his campaigns in India and was not yet particularly well known to the public He reported to the office of the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies to request a new assignment In the waiting room he met Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson already a known figure after his victories at the Nile and Copenhagen who was briefly in England after months pursuing the French Toulon fleet to the West Indies and back Some 30 years later Wellington recalled a conversation that Nelson began with him which Wellesley found almost all on his side in a style so vain and silly as to surprise and almost disgust me 92 Nelson left the room to inquire who the young general was and on his return switched to a very different tone discussing the war the state of the colonies and the geopolitical situation as between equals 93 On this second discussion Wellington recalled I don t know that I ever had a conversation that interested me more 94 This was the only time that the two men met Nelson was killed at his victory at Trafalgar seven weeks later 92 Wellesley then served in the abortive Anglo Russian expedition to north Germany in 1805 taking a brigade to Elbe 95 He then took a period of extended leave from the army and was elected as a Tory member of the British parliament for Rye in January 1806 96 97 A year later he was elected MP for Newport on the Isle of Wight and was then appointed to serve as Chief Secretary for Ireland under the Duke of Richmond At the same time he was made a privy counsellor 96 While in Ireland he gave a verbal promise that the remaining Penal Laws would be enforced with great moderation perhaps an indication of his later willingness to support Catholic emancipation 98 War against Denmark Norway Edit Main article Battle of Copenhagen 1807 Wellesley was in Ireland in May 1807 when he heard of the British expedition to Denmark Norway He decided to go while maintaining his political appointments and was appointed to command an infantry brigade in the Second Battle of Copenhagen which took place in August He fought at Koge during which the men under his command took 1 500 prisoners with Wellesley later present during the surrender 96 By 30 September he had returned to England and was raised to the rank of lieutenant general on 25 April 1808 96 In June 1808 he accepted the command of an expedition of 9 000 men Preparing to sail for an attack on the Spanish colonies in South America to assist the Latin American patriot Francisco de Miranda his force was instead ordered to sail for Portugal to take part in the Peninsular Campaign and rendezvous with 5 000 troops from Gibraltar 99 100 Peninsular War EditMain article Peninsular War Further information British Army during the Napoleonic Wars and Anglo Portuguese Army 1808 1809 Edit Ready for battle Wellesley left Cork on 12 July 1808 to participate in the war against French forces in the Iberian Peninsula with his skills as a commander tested and developed 99 According to the historian Robin Neillands Wellesley had by now acquired the experience on which his later successes were founded He knew about command from the ground up about the importance of logistics about campaigning in a hostile environment He enjoyed political influence and realised the need to maintain support at home Above all he had gained a clear idea of how by setting attainable objectives and relying on his own force and abilities a campaign could be fought and won 99 Reenactors of the 33rd Regiment of Foot Wellington s Redcoats who fought in the Napoleonic Wars 1812 1815 here showing the standard line 8th Company Wellesley defeated the French at the Battle of Rolica and the Battle of Vimeiro in 1808 101 but was superseded in command immediately after the latter battle General Dalrymple then signed the controversial Convention of Sintra which stipulated that the Royal Navy transport the French army out of Lisbon with all their loot and insisted on the association of the only available government minister Wellesley 101 Dalrymple and Wellesley were recalled to Britain to face a Court of Enquiry Wellesley had agreed to sign the preliminary armistice but had not signed the convention and was cleared 102 Simultaneously Napoleon entered Spain with his veteran troops to put down the revolt the new commander of the British forces in the Peninsula Sir John Moore died during the Battle of Corunna in January 1809 103 Although overall the land war with France was not going well from a British perspective the Peninsula was the one theatre where they with the Portuguese had provided strong resistance against France and her allies This contrasted with the disastrous Walcheren expedition which was typical of the mismanaged British operations of the time Wellesley submitted a memorandum to Lord Castlereagh on the defence of Portugal He stressed its mountainous frontiers and advocated Lisbon as the main base because the Royal Navy could help to defend it Castlereagh and the cabinet approved the memo and appointed him head of all British forces in Portugal 104 Wellesley arrived in Lisbon on 22 April 1809 on board HMS Surveillante 105 after narrowly escaping shipwreck 106 Reinforced he took to the offensive In the Second Battle of Porto he crossed the Douro river in a daylight coup de main and routed Marshal Soult s French troops in Porto 107 With Portugal secured Wellesley advanced into Spain to unite with General Cuesta s forces The combined allied force prepared for an assault on Marshal Victor s I Corps at Talavera 23 July Cuesta however was reluctant to agree and was only persuaded to advance on the following day 108 The delay allowed the French to withdraw but Cuesta sent his army headlong after Victor and found himself faced by almost the entire French army in New Castile Victor had been reinforced by the Toledo and Madrid garrisons The Spanish retreated precipitously necessitating the advance of two British divisions to cover their retreat 109 The next day 27 July at the Battle of Talavera the French advanced in three columns and were repulsed several times throughout the day by Wellesley but at a heavy cost to the British force In the aftermath Marshal Soult s army was discovered to be advancing south threatening to cut Wellesley off from Portugal Wellesley moved east on 3 August to block it leaving 1 500 wounded in the care of the Spanish 110 intending to confront Soult before finding out that the French were in fact 30 000 strong The British commander sent the Light Brigade on a dash to hold the bridge over the Tagus at Almaraz With communications and supply from Lisbon secured for now Wellesley considered joining with Cuesta again but found out that his Spanish ally had abandoned the British wounded to the French and was thoroughly uncooperative promising and then refusing to supply the British forces aggravating Wellesley and causing considerable friction between the British and their Spanish allies The lack of supplies coupled with the threat of French reinforcement including the possible inclusion of Napoleon himself in the spring led to the British deciding to retreat into Portugal 111 Following his victory at Talavera Wellesley was elevated to the Peerage of the United Kingdom on 26 August 1809 as Viscount Wellington of Talavera and of Wellington in the County of Somerset with the subsidiary title of Baron Douro of Wellesley 112 113 1810 1812 Edit In 1810 a newly enlarged French army under Marshal Andre Massena invaded Portugal British opinion was negative and there were suggestions to evacuate Portugal Instead Lord Wellington first slowed the French at Bucaco 114 he then prevented them from taking the Lisbon Peninsula by the construction of massive earthworks known as the Lines of Torres Vedras which had been assembled in complete secrecy with their flanks guarded by the Royal Navy 115 The baffled and starving French invasion forces retreated after six months Wellington s pursuit was hindered by a series of reverses inflicted by Marshal Ney in a much lauded rear guard campaign 116 In 1811 Massena returned toward Portugal to relieve Almeida Wellington narrowly checked the French at the Battle of Fuentes de Onoro 117 Simultaneously his subordinate Viscount Beresford fought Soult s Army of the South to a bloody stalemate at the Battle of Albuera in May 118 Wellington was promoted to full general on 31 July for his services The French abandoned Almeida avoiding British pursuit 119 but retained the twin Spanish fortresses of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz the Keys guarding the roads through the mountain passes into Portugal 120 Wellington at the Battle of Salamanca engraving after William Heath In 1812 Wellington finally captured Ciudad Rodrigo via a rapid movement as the French went into winter quarters storming it before they could react He then moved south quickly besieged the fortress of Badajoz for a month and captured it during the night on 6 April 1812 On viewing the aftermath of the Storming of Badajoz Wellington lost his composure and cried at the sight of the British dead in the breaches 121 His army now was a veteran British force reinforced by units of the retrained Portuguese army Campaigning in Spain he was made Earl of Wellington in the county of Somerset on 22 February 1812 122 He routed the French at the Battle of Salamanca taking advantage of a minor French mispositioning 123 The victory liberated the Spanish capital of Madrid He was later made Marquess of Wellington in the said county on 18 August 1812 124 Wellington attempted to take the vital fortress of Burgos which linked Madrid to France He failed due in part to a lack of siege guns forcing him into a headlong retreat with the loss of over 2 000 casualties 125 The French abandoned Andalusia and combined the troops of Soult and Marmont Thus combined the French outnumbered the British putting the British forces in a precarious position Wellington withdrew his army and joined by the smaller corps under the command of Rowland Hill which had been moved to Madrid began to retreat to Portugal Marshal Soult declined to attack 126 The Duke of Wellington by Francisco Goya 1812 14 1813 1814 Edit In 1813 Wellington led a new offensive this time against the French line of communications He struck through the hills north of Burgos the Tras os Montes and switched his supply line from Portugal to Santander on Spain s north coast this led to the French abandoning Madrid and Burgos Continuing to outflank the French lines Wellington caught up with and routed the army of King Joseph Bonaparte in the Battle of Vitoria for which he was promoted to field marshal on 21 June 127 He personally led a column against the French centre while other columns commanded by Sir Thomas Graham Rowland Hill and the Earl of Dalhousie looped around the French right and left this battle became the subject of Beethoven s orchestral piece the Wellington s Victory Opus 91 The British troops broke ranks to loot the abandoned French wagons instead of pursuing the beaten foe When troops failed to return to their units and began harassing the locals an enraged Wellington to write in a famous despatch to Earl Bathurst We have in the service the scum of the earth as common soldiers 128 Although later when his temper had cooled he extended his comment to praise the men under his command saying that though many of the men were the scum of the earth it is really wonderful that we should have made them to the fine fellows they are 129 After taking the small fortresses of Pamplona Wellington invested San Sebastian but was frustrated by the obstinate French garrison losing 693 dead and 316 captured in a failed assault and suspending the siege at the end of July Soult s relief attempt was blocked by the Spanish Army of Galicia at San Marcial allowing the Allies to consolidate their position and tighten the ring around the city which fell in September after a second spirited defence 130 Wellington then forced Soult s demoralised and battered army into a fighting retreat into France punctuated by battles at the Pyrenees 131 Bidassoa and Nivelle 132 133 Wellington invaded southern France winning at the Nive and Orthez 134 Wellington s final battle against his rival Soult occurred at Toulouse where the Allied divisions were badly mauled storming the French redoubts losing some 4 600 men Despite this momentary victory news arrived of Napoleon s defeat and abdication 135 and Soult seeing no reason to continue the fighting agreed on a ceasefire with Wellington allowing Soult to evacuate the city 136 Hailed as the conquering hero by the British on 3 May 1814 Wellington was made Duke of Wellington in the county of Somerset together with the subsidiary title of Marquess Douro in said County 112 137 He received some recognition during his lifetime the title of Duque de Ciudad Rodrigo and Grandee of Spain and the Spanish King Ferdinand VII allowed him to keep part of the works of art from the Royal Collection which he had recovered from the French His equestrian portrait features prominently in the Monument to the Battle of Vitoria in present day Vitoria Gasteiz 138 Wellington far left alongside Metternich Talleyrand and other European diplomats at the Congress of Vienna 1815 engraving after Jean Baptiste Isabey His popularity in Britain was due to his image and his appearance as well as to his military triumphs His victory fitted well with the passion and intensity of the Romantic movement with its emphasis on individuality His personal style influenced the fashions in Britain at the time his tall lean figure and his plumed black hat and grand yet classic uniform and white trousers became very popular 139 In late 1814 the Prime Minister wanted him to take command in Canada with the assignment of winning the War of 1812 against the United States Wellesley replied that he would go to America but he believed that he was needed more in Europe He stated I think you have no right from the state of war to demand any concession of territory from America You have not been able to carry it into the enemy s territory notwithstanding your military success and now undoubted military superiority and have not even cleared your own territory on the point of attack You cannot on any principle of equality in negotiation claim a cession of territory except in exchange for other advantages which you have in your power Then if this reasoning be true why stipulate for the uti possidetis You can get no territory indeed the state of your military operations however creditable does not entitle you to demand any 140 He was appointed Ambassador to France 141 then took Lord Castlereagh s place as first plenipotentiary to the Congress of Vienna where he strongly advocated allowing France to keep its place in the European balance of power On 2 January 1815 the title of his Knighthood of the Bath was converted to Knight Grand Cross upon the expansion of that order 142 Hundred Days EditFacing Napoleon Edit Main article Hundred Days Engraving of Wellesley by William Say after Thomas Phillips On 26 February 1815 Napoleon escaped from Elba and returned to France He regained control of the country by May and faced a renewed alliance against him 143 Wellington left Vienna for what became known as the Waterloo Campaign He arrived in the Netherlands to take command of the British German army and their allied Dutch all stationed alongside the Prussian forces of Generalfeldmarschall Gebhard Leberecht von Blucher 144 Napoleon s strategy was to isolate the Allied and Prussian armies and annihilate each one separately before the Austrians and Russians arrived In doing so the vast superiority in numbers of the Coalition would be greatly diminished He would then seek the possibility of peace with Austria and Russia 145 The French invaded the Netherlands with Napoleon defeating the Prussians at Ligny and Marshal Ney engaging indecisively with Wellington at the Battle of Quatre Bras 146 The Prussians retreated 18 miles north to Wavre whilst Wellington s Anglo Allied army withdrew 15 miles north to a site he had noted the previous year as favourable for a battle the north ridge of a shallow valley on the Brussels road just south of the small town of Waterloo On 17 June there was torrential rain which severely hampered movement 147 and had a considerable effect the next day 18 June when the Battle of Waterloo was fought This was the first time Wellington had encountered Napoleon he commanded an Anglo Dutch German army that consisted of approximately 73 000 troops 26 000 of whom were British 148 Approximately 30 percent of that 26 000 were Irish 149 Battle of Waterloo Edit Main article Battle of Waterloo Wellington at Waterloo by Robert Alexander Hillingford The Battle of Waterloo was fought on Sunday 18 June 1815 near Waterloo at that time in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands now in Belgium It commenced with a diversionary attack on Hougoumont by a division of French soldiers After a barrage of 80 cannons the first French infantry attack was launched by Comte D Erlon s I Corps D Erlon s troops advanced through the Allied centre resulting in Allied troops in front of the ridge retreating in disorder through the main position D Erlon s corps stormed the most fortified Allied position La Haye Sainte but failed to take it An Allied division under Thomas Picton met the remainder of D Erlon s corps head to head engaging them in an infantry duel in which Picton fell During this struggle Lord Uxbridge launched two of his cavalry brigades at the enemy catching the French infantry off guard driving them to the bottom of the slope and capturing two French Imperial Eagles The charge however over reached itself and the British cavalry crushed by fresh French horsemen hurled at them by Napoleon were driven back suffering tremendous losses 150 A little before 16 00 Marshal Ney noted an apparent exodus from Wellington s centre He mistook the movement of casualties to the rear for the beginnings of a retreat and sought to exploit it Ney at this time had few infantry reserves left as most of the infantry had been committed either to the futile Hougoumont attack or to the defence of the French right Ney therefore tried to break Wellington s centre with a cavalry charge alone 151 The Grenadiers a Cheval Napoleon can be seen in the background on a grey horse A number of different mounts could have been ridden by Napoleon at Waterloo Ali Crebere Desiree Jaffa Marie and Tauris 152 At about 16 30 the first Prussian corps arrived Commanded by Freiherr von Bulow IV Corps arrived as the French cavalry attack was in full spate Bulow sent the 15th Brigade to link up with Wellington s left flank in the Frichermont La Haie area while the brigade s horse artillery battery and additional brigade artillery deployed to its left in support 153 Napoleon sent Lobau s corps to intercept the rest of Bulow s IV Corps proceeding to Plancenoit The 15th Brigade sent Lobau s corps into retreat to the Plancenoit area Von Hiller s 16th Brigade also pushed forward with six battalions against Plancenoit Napoleon had dispatched all eight battalions of the Young Guard to reinforce Lobau who was now seriously pressed by the enemy Napoleon s Young Guard counter attacked and after very hard fighting secured Plancenoit but were themselves counter attacked and driven out 154 Napoleon then resorted to sending two battalions of the Middle and Old Guard into Plancenoit and after ferocious fighting they recaptured the village 154 The French cavalry attacked the British infantry squares many times each at a heavy cost to the French but with few British casualties Ney himself was displaced from his horse four times 155 Eventually it became obvious even to Ney that cavalry alone were achieving little Belatedly he organised a combined arms attack using Bachelu s division and Tissot s regiment of Foy s division from Reille s II Corps plus those French cavalry that remained in a fit state to fight This assault was directed along much the same route as the previous heavy cavalry attacks 156 The storming of La Haye Sainte by Richard Knotel Meanwhile at approximately the same time as Ney s combined arms assault on the centre right of Wellington s line Napoleon ordered Ney to capture La Haye Sainte at whatever the cost Ney accomplished this with what was left of D Erlon s corps soon after 18 00 Ney then moved horse artillery up towards Wellington s centre and began to attack the infantry squares at short range with canister 151 This all but destroyed the 27th Inniskilling Regiment and the 30th and 73rd Regiments suffered such heavy losses that they had to combine to form a viable square Wellington s centre was now on the verge of collapse and wide open to an attack from the French Luckily for Wellington Pirch I s and Zieten s corps of the Prussian Army were now at hand Zieten s corps permitted the two fresh cavalry brigades of Vivian and Vandeleur on Wellington s extreme left to be moved and posted behind the depleted centre Pirch I Corps then proceeded to support Bulow and together they regained possession of Plancenoit and once more the Charleroi road was swept by Prussian round shot The value of this reinforcement is held in high regard 150 Wellington at the battle of Waterloo The French army now fiercely attacked the Coalition all along the line with the culminating point being reached when Napoleon sent forward the Imperial Guard at 19 30 The attack of the Imperial Guards was mounted by five battalions of the Middle Guard and not by the Grenadiers or Chasseurs of the Old Guard Marching through a hail of canister and skirmisher fire and severely outnumbered the 3 000 or so Middle Guardsmen advanced to the west of La Haye Sainte and proceeded to separate into three distinct attack forces One consisting of two battalions of Grenadiers defeated the Coalition s first line and marched on Chasse s relatively fresh Dutch division was sent against them and Allied artillery fired into the victorious Grenadiers flank This still could not stop the Guard s advance so Chasse ordered his first brigade to charge the outnumbered French who faltered and broke 157 British 10th Hussars of Vivian s Brigade red shakos blue uniforms attacking mixed French troops including a square of Guard grenadiers left middle distance in the final stages of the battle Further to the west 1 500 British Foot Guards under Maitland were lying down to protect themselves from the French artillery As two battalions of Chasseurs approached the second prong of the Imperial Guard s attack Maitland s guardsmen rose and devastated them with point blank volleys The Chasseurs deployed to counter attack but began to waver A bayonet charge by the Foot Guards then broke them The third prong a fresh Chasseur battalion now came up in support The British guardsmen retreated with these Chasseurs in pursuit but the latter were halted as the 52nd Light Infantry wheeled in line onto their flank and poured a devastating fire into them and then charged 157 158 Under this onslaught they too broke 158 The last of the Guard retreated headlong Mass panic ensued through the French lines as the news spread La Garde recule Sauve qui peut The Guard is retreating Every man for himself Wellington then stood up in Copenhagen s stirrups and waved his hat in the air to signal an advance of the Allied line just as the Prussians were overrunning the French positions to the east What remained of the French army then abandoned the field in disorder Wellington and Blucher met at the inn of La Belle Alliance on the north south road which bisected the battlefield and it was agreed that the Prussians should pursue the retreating French army back to France 157 The Treaty of Paris was signed on 20 November 1815 159 After the victory the Duke supported proposals that a medal be awarded to all British soldiers who participated in the Waterloo campaign and on 28 June 1815 he wrote to the Duke of York suggesting the expediency of giving to the non commissioned officers and soldiers engaged in the Battle of Waterloo a medal I am convinced it would have the best effect in the army and if the battle should settle our concerns they will well deserve it The Waterloo Medal was duly authorised and distributed to all ranks in 1816 160 Controversy Edit Much historical discussion has been made about Napoleon s decision to send 33 000 troops under Marshal Grouchy to intercept the Prussians but having defeated Blucher at Ligny on 16 June and forced the Allies to retreat in divergent directions Napoleon may have been strategically astute in a judgement that he would have been unable to beat the combined Allied forces on one battlefield Wellington s comparable strategic gamble was to leave 17 000 troops and artillery mostly Dutch 8 1 mi 13 0 km away at Halle north west of Mont Saint Jean in case of a French advance up the Mons Hal Brussels road 161 Wellington at the battle of Waterloo Detail of a painting by Jan Willem Pieneman 1824 The campaign led to numerous other controversies Issues concerning Wellington s troop dispositions prior to Napoleon s invasion of the Netherlands whether Wellington misled or betrayed Blucher by promising then failing to come directly to Blucher s aid at Ligny and credit for the victory between Wellington and the Prussians These and other such issues concerning Blucher s Wellington s and Napoleon s decisions during the campaign were the subject of a strategic level study by the Prussian political military theorist Carl von Clausewitz Feldzug von 1815 Strategische Uebersicht des Feldzugs von 1815 English title The Campaign of 1815 Strategic Overview of the Campaign b This study was Clausewitz s last such work and is widely considered to be the best example of Clausewitz s mature theories concerning such analyses 162 It attracted the attention of Wellington s staff who prompted the Duke to write a published essay on the campaign other than his immediate official after action report The Waterloo Dispatch This was published as the 1842 Memorandum on the Battle of Waterloo While Wellington disputed Clausewitz on several points Clausewitz largely absolved Wellington of accusations levelled against him This exchange with Clausewitz was quite famous in Britain in the 19th century particularly in Charles Cornwallis Chesney s work the Waterloo Lectures but was largely ignored in the 20th century due to hostilities between Britain and Germany 163 Politics EditPrime Minister Edit Further information Wellington Peel ministry Portrait of the Duke of Wellington by John Jackson 1830 31 Wellington entered politics again when he was appointed Master General of the Ordnance in the Tory government of Lord Liverpool on 26 December 1818 164 He also became Governor of Plymouth on 9 October 1819 165 He was appointed Commander in Chief of the British Army on 22 January 1827 166 167 and Constable of the Tower of London on 5 February 1827 168 Along with Robert Peel Wellington became an increasingly influential member of the Tory party and in 1828 he resigned as Commander in Chief and became prime minister 169 During his first seven months as prime minister he chose not to live in the official residence at 10 Downing Street finding it too small He moved in only because his own home Apsley House required extensive renovations During this time he was largely instrumental in the foundation of King s College London On 20 January 1829 Wellington was appointed Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports 170 Reform Edit See also Catholic emancipation Reform Bill and Emancipation of Jews His term was marked by Roman Catholic Emancipation the restoration of most civil rights to Roman Catholics in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland The change was prompted by the landslide by election win of Daniel O Connell a Roman Catholic Irish proponent of emancipation who was elected despite not being legally allowed to sit in Parliament In the House of Lords facing stiff opposition Wellington spoke for Catholic Emancipation and according to some sources gave one of the best speeches of his career 171 Wellington was born in Ireland and so had some understanding of the grievances of the Roman Catholic majority there as Chief Secretary he had given an undertaking that the remaining Penal Laws would only be enforced as mildly as possible 98 In 1811 Catholic soldiers were given freedom of worship 172 and 18 years later the Catholic Relief Act 1829 was passed with a majority of 105 Many Tories voted against the Act and it passed only with the help of the Whigs 173 Wellington had threatened to resign as prime minister if King George IV did not give Royal Assent 174 A satirical cartoon attacking the Duke of Wellington then prime minister for the passage in April 1829 of the Roman Catholic Relief Act The Earl of Winchilsea accused the Duke of an insidious design for the infringement of our liberties and the introduction of Popery into every department of the State 175 Wellington responded by immediately challenging Winchilsea to a duel On 21 March 1829 Wellington and Winchilsea met on Battersea fields When the time came to fire the Duke took aim and Winchilsea kept his arm down The Duke fired wide to the right Accounts differ as to whether he missed on purpose an act known in duelling as a delope Wellington claimed he did However he was noted for his poor aim and reports more sympathetic to Winchilsea claimed he had aimed to kill Winchilsea discharged his pistol into the air a plan he and his second had almost certainly decided upon before the duel 176 Honour was saved and Winchilsea wrote Wellington an apology 175 177 The nickname Iron Duke originated from this period when he experienced a high degree of personal and political unpopularity Its repeated use in Freeman s Journal throughout June 1830 appears to bear reference to his resolute political will with taints of disapproval from its Irish editors 178 179 180 During this time Wellington was greeted by a hostile reaction from the crowds at the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway 181 Wellington s government fell in 1830 In the summer and autumn of that year a wave of riots swept the country 182 The Whigs had been out of power for most years since the 1770s and saw political reform in response to the unrest as the key to their return Wellington stuck to the Tory policy of no reform and no expansion of suffrage and as a result lost a vote of no confidence on 15 November 1830 183 The Whigs introduced the first Reform Bill while Wellington and the Tories worked to prevent its passage The Whigs could not get the bill past its second reading in the British House of Commons and the attempt failed An election followed in direct response and the Whigs were returned with a landslide majority A second Reform Act was introduced and passed in the House of Commons but was defeated in the Tory controlled House of Lords Another wave of near insurrection swept the country Wellington s residence at Apsley House was targeted by a mob of demonstrators on 27 April 1831 and again on 12 October leaving his windows smashed 184 Iron shutters were installed in June 1832 to prevent further damage by crowds angry over rejection of the Reform Bill which he strongly opposed 185 The Whig Government fell in 1832 and Wellington was unable to form a Tory Government partly because of a run on the Bank of England This left King William IV no choice but to restore Earl Grey to the premiership Eventually the bill passed the House of Lords after the King threatened to fill that House with newly created Whig peers if it were not Wellington was never reconciled to the change when Parliament first met after the first election under the widened franchise Wellington is reported to have said I never saw so many shocking bad hats in my life 186 Wellington opposed the Jewish Civil Disabilities Repeal Bill and he stated in Parliament on 1 August 1833 that England is a Christian country and a Christian legislature and that the effect of this measure would be to remove that peculiar character The Bill was defeated by 104 votes to 54 187 Government Edit Main articles Wellington caretaker ministry and First Peel ministry Daguerreotype of Wellington aged 74 or 75 by Antoine Claudet 1844 Wellington was gradually superseded as leader of the Tories by Robert Peel while the party evolved into the Conservatives When the Tories were returned to power in 1834 Wellington declined to become prime minister because he thought membership in the House of Commons had become essential The king reluctantly approved Peel who was in Italy Hence Wellington acted as interim leader for three weeks in November and December 1834 taking the responsibilities of prime minister and most of the other ministries 188 In Peel s first cabinet 1834 1835 Wellington became foreign secretary while in the second 1841 1846 he was a minister without portfolio and Leader of the House of Lords 189 Wellington was also re appointed Commander in Chief of the British Army on 15 August 1842 following the resignation of Lord Hill 190 Wellington served as the leader of the Conservative party in the House of Lords from 1828 to 1846 Some historians have belittled him as a befuddled reactionary but a consensus in the late 20th century depicts him as a shrewd operator who hid his cleverness behind the facade of a poorly informed old soldier Wellington worked to transform the Lords from unstinting support of the Crown to an active player in political manoeuvring with a commitment to the landed aristocracy He used his London residence as a venue for intimate dinners and private consultations together with extensive correspondence that kept him in close touch with party leaders in the Commons and the main persona in the Lords He gave public rhetorical support to Ultra Tory anti reform positions but then deftly changed positions toward the party s centre especially when Peel needed support from the upper house Wellington s success was based on the 44 elected peers from Scotland and Ireland whose elections he controlled 191 Later life EditFamily Edit Portrait miniature of an elderly Wellington by Robert Thorburn Wellesley was married by his brother Gerald a clergyman to Kitty Pakenham in St George s Church Dublin on 10 April 1806 192 They had two children Arthur was born in 1807 and Charles was born in 1808 The marriage proved unsatisfactory and the two spent years apart while Wellesley was campaigning and afterwards Kitty grew depressed and Wellesley pursued other sexual and romantic partners 99 193 The couple largely lived apart with Kitty spending most of her time at their country home Stratfield Saye House and Wellesley at their London home Apsley House Kitty s brother Edward Pakenham served under Wellesley throughout the Peninsular War and Wellesley s regard for him helped to smooth his relations with Kitty until Pakenham s death at the Battle of New Orleans in 1815 194 Retirement Edit Wellington retired from political life in 1846 although he remained Commander in Chief and returned briefly to the public eye in 1848 when he helped organise a military force to protect London during the year of European revolution 195 The Conservative Party had split over the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 with Wellington and most of the former Cabinet still supporting Peel but most of the MPs led by Lord Derby supporting a protectionist stance Early in 1852 Wellington by then very deaf gave Derby s first government its nickname by shouting Who Who as the list of inexperienced Cabinet ministers was read out in the House of Lords 196 He became Chief Ranger and Keeper of Hyde Park and St James s Park on 31 August 1850 197 He remained colonel of the 33rd Regiment of Foot from 1 February 1806 198 and colonel of the Grenadier Guards from 22 January 1827 199 Kitty died of cancer in 1831 despite their generally unhappy relations which had led to an effective separation Wellington was said to have been greatly saddened by her death his one comfort being that after half a lifetime together they had come to understand each other at the end 200 He had found consolation for his unhappy marriage in his warm friendship with the diarist Harriet Arbuthnot wife of his colleague Charles Arbuthnot 201 Harriet s death in the cholera epidemic of 1834 was almost as great a blow to Wellington as it was to her husband 202 The two widowers spent their last years together at Apsley House 203 Death and funeral Edit Wellesley s funeral procession passing Wellington Arch and Apsley House Main article Death and state funeral of Wellington Wellington died at Walmer Castle in Kent his residence as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and reputedly his favourite home on 14 September 1852 He was found to be unwell on that morning and was helped from his campaign bed which he had used throughout his military career and seated in his chair where he died His death was recorded as being due to the after effects of a stroke culminating in a series of seizures He was aged 83 204 184 Wellington s tomb in St Paul s Cathedral London Although in life he hated travelling by rail having witnessed the death of William Huskisson one of the first railway accident casualties his body was taken by train to London where he was given a state funeral one of a small number of British subjects to be so honoured other examples include Lord Nelson and Sir Winston Churchill The funeral took place on 18 November 1852 205 206 Before the funeral the Duke s body lay in state at the Royal Hospital Chelsea Members of the royal family including Queen Victoria the Prince Consort the Prince of Wales and the Princess Royal visited to pay their respects When viewing opened to the public crowds thronged to visit and several people were killed in the crush 207 He was buried in St Paul s Cathedral and during his funeral there was little space to stand due to the number of attendees 208 A bronze memorial was sculpted by Alfred Stevens and features two intricate supports Truth tearing the tongue out of the mouth of False hood and Valour trampling Cowardice underfoot Stevens did not live to see it placed in its home under one of the arches of the cathedral 209 A bronze statue of Wellington by Carlo Marochetti in Woodhouse Moor Leeds Wellington s casket was decorated with banners which were made for his funeral procession Originally there was one from Prussia which was removed during World War I and never reinstated 210 In the procession the Great Banner was carried by General Sir James Charles Chatterton of the 4th Dragoon Guards on the orders of Queen Victoria 211 Most of the book A Biographical Sketch of the Military and Political Career of the Late Duke of Wellington by Weymouth newspaper proprietor Joseph Drew is a detailed contemporary account of his death lying in state and funeral 212 After his death Irish and English newspapers disputed whether Wellington had been born an Irishman or an Englishman 213 In 2002 he was number 15 in the BBC s poll of the 100 Greatest Britons 214 Owing to its links with Wellington as the former commanding officer and colonel of the regiment the title 33rd The Duke of Wellington s Regiment was granted to the 33rd Regiment of Foot on 18 June 1853 the 38th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo by Queen Victoria 215 Wellington s battle record is exemplary he participated in some 60 battles during the course of his military career 216 Personality Edit The Duke of Wellington c 1850 Wellington always rose early he couldn t bear to lie awake in bed even if the army was not on the march 217 Even when he returned to civilian life after 1815 he slept in a camp bed reflecting his lack of regard for creature comforts General Miguel de Alava complained that Wellington said so often that the army would march at daybreak and dine on cold meat that he began to dread those two phrases 218 While on campaign he seldom ate anything between breakfast and dinner During the retreat to Portugal in 1811 he subsisted on cold meat and bread to the despair of his staff who dined with him 219 He was however renowned for the quality of the wine that he drank and served often drinking a bottle with his dinner not a great quantity by the standards of his day 220 Alava was a witness to an incident just before the Battle of Salamanca Wellington was eating a chicken leg while observing the manoeuvres of the French army through a spyglass He spotted an overextension in the French left flank and realised that he could launch a successful attack there He exclaimed By God that will do and threw the drumstick in the air 221 After the Battle of Toulouse Colonel Frederick Ponsonby brought him the news of Napoleon s abdication and Wellington broke into an impromptu flamenco dance spinning around on his heels and clicking his fingers 222 Plaster model located at the Victoria and Albert Museum of the Valour and Cowardice motif used in the memorial to Wellington at St Paul s Cathedral Military historian Charles Dalton recorded that after a hard fought battle in Spain a young officer made the comment I am going to dine with Wellington tonight which was overheard by the Duke as he rode by Give me at least the prefix of Mr before my name Wellington said My Lord replied the officer we do not speak of Mr Caesar or Mr Alexander so why should I speak of Mr Wellington 223 While known for his stern countenance and iron handed discipline Wellington was by no means unfeeling While he is said to have disapproved of soldiers cheering as too nearly an expression of opinion 224 Wellington nevertheless cared for his men he refused to pursue the French after the battles of Porto and Salamanca foreseeing an inevitable cost to his army in chasing a diminished enemy through rough terrain The only time that he ever showed grief in public was after the storming of Badajoz he cried at the sight of the British dead in the breaches 121 In this context his famous despatch after the Battle of Vitoria calling them the scum of the earth can be seen to be fuelled as much by disappointment at their breaking ranks as by anger He shed tears after Waterloo on the presentation of the list of British fallen by Dr John Hume Later with his family unwilling to be congratulated for his victory he broke down in tears his fighting spirit diminished by the high cost of the battle and great personal loss 225 Wellington s soldier servant a gruff German called Beckerman and his long serving valet James Kendall who served him for 25 years and was with him when he died were both devoted to him 226 A story that he never spoke to his servants and preferred instead to write his orders on a notepad on his dressing table in fact probably refers to his son the 2nd Duke It was recorded by the 3rd Duke s niece Viva Seton Montgomerie 1879 1959 as being an anecdote she heard from an old retainer Charles Holman who was said greatly to resemble Napoleon 227 Following an incident when as Master General of the Ordnance he had been close to a large explosion Wellington began to experience deafness and other ear related problems In 1822 he had an operation to improve the hearing of the left ear The result however was that he became permanently deaf on that side It is claimed that he was never quite well afterwards 184 Perhaps because of his unhappy marriage Wellington came to enjoy the company of a variety of intellectual and attractive women and had many amorous liaisons particularly after the Battle of Waterloo and his subsequent ambassadorial position in Paris In the days following Waterloo he had an affair with the notorious Lady Caroline Lamb sister of one of his severely wounded officers and favourites Col Frederick Ponsonby He corresponded for many years with Lady Georgiana Lennox later Lady de Ros 26 years his junior and daughter of the Duchess of Richmond who held the famous ball on the eve of Waterloo and though there are hints it has not been clearly determined if the relationship was ever sexual 228 The British press lampooned the amorous side of the national hero 193 In 1824 one liaison came back to haunt him when Wellington received a letter from a publisher John Joseph Stockdale offering to refrain from issuing an edition of the rather racy memoirs of one of his mistresses Harriette Wilson in exchange for money It is said that the Duke promptly returned the letter after scrawling across it Publish and be damned 229 However Hibbert notes in his biography that the letter can be found among the Duke s papers with nothing written on it 230 It is certain that Wellington did reply and the tone of a further letter from the publisher quoted by Longford suggests that he had refused in the strongest language to submit to blackmail 231 He was also a remarkably practical man who spoke concisely In 1851 it was discovered that there were a great many sparrows flying about in the Crystal Palace just before the Great Exhibition was to open His advice to Queen Victoria was Sparrowhawks ma am 232 Wellington has often been portrayed as a defensive general even though many perhaps most of his battles were offensive Argaum Assaye Oporto Salamanca Vitoria Toulouse However for most of the Peninsular War where he earned his fame his army lacked the numbers for a strategically offensive posture 233 Titles and tributes EditMain article List of titles and honours of Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington See also Batons of Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington See also List of monuments to Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington See also Cultural depictions of Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of WellingtonNicknames Edit Apsley House in 1829 by Thomas H Shepherd Sir John Steell s equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington the Iron Duke in bronze by Steell Edinburgh 1852 The Iron Duke Edit This section is about a nickname of Wellington For the metaphor it is based upon see Iron metaphor For other uses see Iron Duke disambiguation This commonly used nickname originally related to his consistent political resolve rather than to any particular incident In various cases its editorial use appears to be disparaging 178 179 180 It is likely that its use became more widespread after an incident in 1832 in which he installed metal shutters to prevent rioters breaking windows at Apsley House 185 234 The term may have been made increasingly popular by Punch cartoons published in 1844 45 235 236 Other nicknames Edit In the popular ballads of the day Wellington was called Nosey or Old Nosey 237 Tsar Alexander I of Russia called Wellington Le vainqueur du vainqueur du monde the conqueror of the world s conqueror the phrase the world s conqueror referring to Napoleon 238 Lord Tennyson uses a similar reference in his Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington referring to him as the great World victor s victor 239 Officers under his command called him The Beau as he was a fine dresser 240 Spanish troops called him The Eagle while Portuguese troops called him Douro Douro after his river crossing at Oporto in 1809 241 Beau Douro Wellington found this amusing when hearing it used by a Colonel of the Coldstream Guards 240 Sepoy General Napoleon used this term as an insult to Wellington s military service in India publicly considering him an unworthy opponent The name was used in the French newspaper Le Moniteur Universel as a means of propaganda 242 The Beef It is a theory that the Beef Wellington dish is a reference to Wellington although some chefs dispute this 243 Europe s Liberator 244 Saviour of the Nations 244 See also EditMilitary career of Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington Army Gold Medal Military General Service Medal Seringapatam medal Cotiote WarReferences EditNotes Edit Though 29 April is considered as more likely by some other earlier biographers including Ernest Marsh Lloyd writing in the Dictionary of National Biography with some sources to support that view 6 Norman Gash writing in the more modern Oxford Dictionary of National Biography on balance supports 1 May 7 see Bassford Moran amp Pedlow 2010 for details Citations Edit Gifford 1817 p 375 Wellesley 2008 p 16 Longford 1971 p 53 Severn 2007 p 13 History of Parliament 2013 Lloyd 1899 p 170 a b Gash 2011 Artware Fine Art 2020 Guedalla 1997 p 480 Wellesley 2008 p 16 Anne Mornington insisted that she remembered the details 1 May 1769 at 6 Merrion Street Dublin an elegant new townhouse round the corner from St Stephen s Green the largest public square in Europe Longford 1971 p 14 says there is no valid argument for this choice Holmes 2002 pp 6 7 a b Holmes 2002 p 8 a b Holmes 2002 p 9 Holmes 2002 pp 19 20 a b Holmes 2002 p 20 a b c Holmes 2002 p 21 No 12836 The London Gazette 6 March 1787 p 118 No 12959 The London Gazette 26 January 1788 p 47 a b Holmes 2002 p 22 No 12958 The London Gazette 22 January 1788 p 40 No 13121 The London Gazette 8 August 1789 p 539 Holmes 2002 p 23 a b c Holmes 2002 p 24 Duke of Wellington s Regiment 2006 No 13347 The London Gazette 27 September 1791 p 542 No 13488 The London Gazette 25 December 1792 p 976 a b Holmes 2002 p 25 Number10 2011 Holmes 2002 p 26 Holmes 2002 p 27 No 13542 The London Gazette 29 June 1793 p 555 Holmes 2002 p 28 No 13596 The London Gazette 23 November 1793 p 1052 a b Holmes 2002 p 30 Holmes 2002 p 31 a b Holmes 2002 p 32 a b c Holmes 2002 p 33 No 13892 The London Gazette 14 May 1796 p 460 Holmes 2002 p 34 Holmes 2002 p 40 a b Holmes 2002 p 41 Longford 1971 p 54 Holmes 2002 p 42 Forrest 1970 p 283 a b c d Holmes 2002 p 58 a b Holmes 2002 p 49 Holmes 2002 p 44 a b Holmes 2002 p 47 Holmes 2002 p 51 Holmes 2002 p 53 a b Holmes 2002 p 63 Holmes 2002 p 56 Holmes 2002 p 57 Macquarie University 2008 Bowring 1893 pp 84 85 Holmes 2002 p 59 Holmes 2002 p 60 Holmes 2002 p 62 Holmes 2002 p 67 Jerdan et al 1832 Intelligence Branch 1911 pp 8 20 Holmes 2002 p 64 Weller 1993 p 88 a b Davies 2012 p 22 Weller 1993 pp 94 96 a b Weller 1993 p 97 Davies 2012 pp 33 38 Wellesley 1852 pp 181 190 Davies 2012 p 34 Wellesley 1852 pp 191 a b Weller 1993 p 99 Davies 2012 pp 37 38 Holmes 2002 p 65 a b Holmes 2002 p 69 Holmes 2002 p 73 Holmes 2002 pp 69 73 Holmes 2002 p 74 a b c Holmes 2002 p 81 a b Holmes 2002 p 75 a b Holmes 2002 p 77 a b Holmes 2002 p 80 Longford 1971 p 93 Millar 2006 p 82 a b Holmes 2002 p 82 Holmes 2002 p 83 Holmes 2002 p 88 a b Holmes 2002 p 87 Holmes 2002 p 86 a b c Holmes 2002 p 84 Holmes 2002 p 85 a b Holmes 2002 p 92 Australian Broadcasting Corporation 2005 Lambert 2005 p 283 Roberts 2003a p xxiii a b c d Neillands 2003 p 38 No 15908 The London Gazette 8 April 1806 p 449 a b Longford 1971 p 174 a b c d Neillands 2003 p 39 Holmes 2002 pp 102 103 a b Longford 1971 pp 148 154 Holmes 2002 p 124 Longford 1971 p 171 Longford 1971 p 172 Longford 1971 p 117 Griffiths 1897 Longford 2012 p 118 Gates 2002 p 177 Guedalla 1997 p 186 Longford 2012 p 134 Longford 2012 pp 134 150 a b Muir 2013 p 343 No 16291 The London Gazette 22 August 1809 p 1342 Longford 1971 pp 225 230 Longford 1971 pp 235 240 Longford 2012 p 163 Longford 1971 pp 251 254 Longford 1971 p 257 Longford 1971 pp 254 256 Longford 1971 p 168 a b Holmes 2002 p 162 No 16576 The London Gazette 18 February 1812 p 335 Longford 1971 pp 283 287 No 16636 The London Gazette 18 August 1812 p 1677 Gates 2002 p 366 While in view of the developing strategic situation is not clear what Wellesley hoped to gain by its seizure he had resolved to take the fortress a task which he evidently believed could be easily accomplished for notwithstanding the sanguinary lessons that virtually all his sieges had given him and the availability of scores of heavy cannon captured at Ciudad Rodrigo and Madrid he brought up only eight heavy guns to breach the defences This force was to prove lamentably inadequate and in this and other aspects of the operation Wellesley s complacency and ineptitude were to cost his troops dear Longford 1971 pp 297 299 Holmes 2002 p 189 Wellington to Bathurst dispatches p 496 Haythornthwaite 1998 p 7 Longford 1971 p 332 No 16934 The London Gazette 13 September 1814 p 1850 Longford 1971 p 336 No 16934 The London Gazette 13 September 1814 p 1851 Longford 1971 p 342 Longford 1971 pp 344 345 Longford 2012 p 228 No 16894 The London Gazette 3 May 1814 p 936 Cornwell 2009 Bicat 2003 p 65 66 Mills 1921 p 22 No 16915 The London Gazette 9 July 1814 p 1389 No 16972 The London Gazette 4 January 1815 p 18 Barbero 2005 p 2 Longford 1971 pp 396 407 Longford 1971 p 410 Longford 1971 pp 423 432 Hibbert 1997 pp 175 176 Adkin 2001 p 37 McGreevy 2015 a b Chisholm 1911 a b Siborne 1990 p 439 Summerville 2007 p 315 Hofschroer 1999 p 117 a b Hofschroer 1999 p 122 Chandler 1987 p 373 Adkin 2001 p 361 a b c Chesney 1907 pp 178 179 a b Parry 1900 p 70 Great Britain Foreign Office 1838 p 280 Cawthorne 2015 p 90 Adkin 2001 p 49 Moran 2010 Bassford 2010 No 17434 The London Gazette 26 December 1818 p 2325 No 17525 The London Gazette 16 October 1819 p 1831 Holmes 2002 p 268 No 18327 The London Gazette 23 January 1827 p 153 No 18335 The London Gazette 13 February 1827 p 340 Holmes 2002 pp 270 271 No 18543 The London Gazette 23 January 1829 p 129 Bloy 2011a Hansard 1811 Holmes 2002 p 277 Thompson 1986 p 95 a b Holmes 2002 p 275 King s College London 2008 Literary Gazette 1829 a b Freeman s Journal 1830a Notes If the Irish Question be lost Ireland has her Representatives to accuse for it still more than the iron Duke and his worthy Chancellor a b Freeman s Journal 1830b Notes One fortnight will force the Iron Duke to abandon his project a b Freeman s Journal 1830c Notes Let the Iron Duke abandon the destructive scheme of Goulburn Blackwood s Edinburgh Magazine 1830 Holmes 2002 p 281 Holmes 2002 p 283 a b c Bloy 2011b a b Freeman s Journal 1832 Notes iron shutters are being fixed of a strength and substance sufficient to resist a musket ball Holmes 2002 p 288 Wellesley 1854 p 671 674 Holmes 2002 p 289 Holmes 2002 pp 291 292 No 20130 The London Gazette 16 August 1842 p 2217 Davis 2003 pp 43 55 Holmes 2002 p 96 a b BBC 2015 Holmes 2002 p 206 Holmes 2002 p 292 Bloy 2011c No 21132 The London Gazette 3 September 1850 p 2396 No 15885 The London Gazette 28 January 1806 p 128 No 18327 The London Gazette 23 January 1827 p 154 Longford 1971 p 281 Longford 1971 p 95 Longford 1971 p 296 Longford 1971 p 297 Corrigan 2006 p 353 The Times 1852a also see The Times 1852b No 21381 The London Gazette 16 November 1852 p 3079 Walford 1878 Holmes 2002 pp 297 298 Victoria and Albert Museum 2014 Saint Paul s Cathedral 2011 Dalton 1904 p 77 Drew 1852 Sinnema 2006 p 93 111 Cooper amp Boycott 2002 p 13 Duke of Wellington s Regiment 2014 Roberts 2003b Holmes 2002 p 177 Holmes 2002 p 175 Hibbert 1997 p 111 Longford 1971 p 356 Holmes 2002 p 166 Glover 2001 p 334 Dalton 1904 p 9 Gere 1981 p 5 Holmes 2002 pp 250 254 Holmes 2002 p 301 Montgomerie 1955 p 31 Crossland 2016 p 13 Cathcart 1994 Hibbert 1997 p 390 Longford 1971 pp 211 212 Holmes 2002 p xvi Rothenberg 1999 p 136 BBC History Retrieved 27 February 2011 R E Foster Mr Punch and the Iron Duke Retrieved 29 May 2011 Holmes 2002 pp 285 288 302 303 Rory Muir 2013 Wellington Waterloo and the fortunes of peace 1814 1852 p 472 ISBN 9780300187861 Cornwell Bernard 2014 Waterloo The History of Four Days Three Armies and Three Battles p 10 Alfred Lord Tennyson 1900 Tennyson Including Lotos Eaters Ulysses Ode on the Death Maud The Coming and the Passing of Arthur p 10 a b Holmes 2002 p 178 Morgan 2004 p 135 Roberts 2003a pp 74 78 79 Scott amp Wright 2006 p 26 a b Prime Ministers in History Duke of Wellington Prime Minister s Office Archived from the original on 15 July 2010 Retrieved 31 July 2008 Sources Edit BooksAdkin Mark 2001 The Waterloo 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Archived from the original on 17 August 2011 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Cawthorne Chris 2015 The Origin and Numismatics of the British Waterloo Medal Orders amp Medals Research Society Journal June 2015 Volume 54 number 2 The Journal of the Orders and Medals Research Society ISSN 1474 3353 Chandler David 1987 Napoleon s Marshals London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0297791249 Chesney Charles C 1907 Waterloo Lectures A Study Of The Campaign Of 1815 Longmans Green and Co ISBN 978 1428649880 Cooper John Boycott Rosie 2002 Great Britons The Great Debate National Portrait Gallery ISBN 978 1855145078 Corrigan Gordon 2006 Wellington A Military Life London Hambledon Continuum ISBN 978 1852855154 Crossland Alice Marie 2016 Wellington s Dearest Georgy London Unicorn ISBN 978 0993242489 Dalton Charles 1904 The Waterloo roll call With biographical notes and anecdotes London Eyre and Spottiswoode Davies Huw 2012 Wellington s War The Making of a Military Genius Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300164176 Drew Joseph 1852 Biographical Sketch of the Military and Political Career of the Late Duke of Wellington Including the More Interesting Particulars of His Death Lying in State and Public Funeral Drew Intelligence Branch Division of the Chief of the Staff Army Headquarters India 1911 The Egyptian Expedition Frontier and Overseas Expeditions from India Calcutta Superintendent Government Printing India pp 8 20 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Forrest Denys 1970 Tiger of Mysore The Life and death of Tipu Sultan Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0701115814 Gates David 2002 The Spanish Ulcer A History of the Peninsular War Pimlico ISBN 978 0712697309 Gash Norman January 2011 Wellesley Arthur first duke of Wellington 1769 1852 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 29001 Subscription or UK public library membership required Gere J A 1981 Sparrow John ed Geoffrey Madan s Notebooks Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192158703 Gifford C A 1817 The Life of the Most Noble Arthur Duke of Wellington London W Lewis Glover Michael 2001 The Peninsular War 1807 1814 A Concise Military History London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0141390413 Griffiths Arthur 1897 The Wellington Memorial Wellington His Comrades and Contemporaries chapters IV and 211 Ballantyne Hanson amp Co Guedalla Philip 1997 The Duke Wordsworth Editions ISBN 978 1853266799 Haythornthwaite Philip J 1998 Weapons amp Equipment of the Napoleonic Wars London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 1854094957 Hibbert Christopher 1997 Wellington A Personal History Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0201632323 Hofschroer Peter 1999 1815 The Waterloo Campaign The German Victory Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1853673689 Holmes Richard 2002 Wellington The Iron Duke London Harper Collins Publishers ISBN 978 0007137503 Kauffmann C M Jenkins Susan Wieseman Marjorie E 2009 1982 Catalogue of Paintings in the Wellington Museum Apsley House PDF revised ed English Heritage in association with Paul Holberton Publishing p 166 ISBN 978 1903470787 Archived from the original PDF on 16 August 2010 Lambert Andrew 2005 Nelson Britannia s God of War London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0571212279 Lloyd Ernest Marsh 1899 Wellesley Arthur In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 60 London Smith Elder amp Co p 170 Longford Elizabeth 1971 Wellington The Years of The Sword HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 978 0586035481 Longford Elizabeth 2012 Wellington London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0349123509 Millar Simon 2006 Assaye 1803 Wellington s Bloodiest Battle Osprey ISBN 978 1846030017 Montgomerie Viva Seton 1955 My Scrapbook of Memories Privately published Moran Daniel 2010 Clausewitz on Waterloo Napoleon at Bay On Waterloo Clausewitz Wellington and the Campaign of 1815 By Clausewitz Carl von Wellesley Arthur First Duke of Wellington Christopher Bassford Daniel Moran Gregory Pedlow eds Clausewitz com ISBN 978 1453701508 Morgan Matthew 2004 Wellington s Victories A Guide to Sharpe s Army London Andrews McMeel Publishing ISBN 978 1843170938 Muir Rory 2013 Wellington The Path to Victory 1769 1814 Vol 1 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300205480 Neillands Robin 2003 Wellington amp Napoleon Clash of Arms Pen amp Sword Books ISBN 978 0850529265 Parry D H 1900 Battle of the nineteenth century 1 London Cassell and Company Archived from the original on 16 December 2008 Roberts Andrew 2003a Napoleon and Wellington The Long Duel Phoenix ISBN 978 0753813904 Rothenberg Gunther E 1999 Keegan John ed The Napoleonic Wars London Cassell amp Co ISBN 978 0304352678 Scott Johnny Wright Clarissa D 2006 Sunday Roast Kyle Cathie ISBN 978 1856266727 Severn John 2007 Architects of Empire The Duke of Wellington and His Brothers University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0806138107 Siborne William 1990 The Waterloo Campaign London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1853670695 Sinnema Peter W 2006 The Wake of Wellington Englishness in 1852 Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0821416792 Summerville Christopher J 2007 Who was who at Waterloo a biography of the battle Pearson Education ISBN 978 0582784055 Thompson Neville 1986 Wellington after Waterloo Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0710207470 Weller Jac 1993 1972 Wellington in India London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1853673979 Wellesley Jane 2008 Wellington A Journey Through My Family London Orion Publishing Group ISBN 978 0297852315 Online resources Portrait of Arthur Wellesley 1769 1852 1st Duke of Wellington Artware Fine Art Retrieved 14 November 2020 Ockham s Razor 16 October 2005 Horatio Nelson 200th Anniversary of Trafalgar Australian Broadcasting Corporation 16 October 2005 Retrieved 14 March 2012 Wellington The Iron Duke Unmasked BBC Retrieved 10 May 2015 Bloy Marjorie 2011a The Peel Web Wellington s speeches on Catholic Emancipation A Web of English History Retrieved 6 April 2011 Bloy Marjorie 2011b Biography Arthur Wellesley first Duke of Wellington 1769 1852 A Web of English History Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 28 May 2011 Bloy Marjorie 2011c Biography Edward George Geoffrey Smith Stanley 14th Earl of Derby 1799 1869 A Web of English History Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2011 Cathcart Brian 20 March 1994 When Wellington said publish and be damned The Field Marshal and the Scarlet Woman The Independent London Retrieved 27 February 2011 Walford Edward 1878 Chelsea The Hospital Old and New London Originally published by Cassell Petter amp Galpin Vol 5 London British History Online pp 70 84 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Waterloo Campaign Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 371 381 Cornwell Cornwell Bernard Cornwell Bernard Cornwell Archived from the original on 11 June 2010 Retrieved 13 October 2009 Regimental Archives Duke of Wellington s Regiment West Riding Archived from the original on 27 April 2006 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Preamble to History Duke of Wellington s Regiment West Riding Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Great Britain Foreign Office Great Britain 1838 British and foreign state papers H M S O p 280 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Wellesley Richard Colley 2nd Earl of Mornington I 1760 1842 of Dangan Castle co Meath History of Parliament Archived from the original on 1 August 2013 The Duel Wellington versus Winchilsea King s College London Archived from the original on 23 March 2009 Retrieved 4 September 2008 The Battle of Seringapatam Chronology Macquarie University Archived from the original on 22 July 2008 Retrieved 17 June 2008 McGreevy Ronan 18 June 2015 Just how many Irish fought at the Battle of Waterloo The Irish Times Dublin Retrieved 7 September 2016 Mills Dudley 1921 The Duke of Wellington and the Peace Negotiations at Ghent in 1814 Canadian Historical Review 2 1 19 32 doi 10 3138 chr 02 01 02 S2CID 161278429 History and Tour Duke of Wellington number10 gov uk Archived from the original on 11 June 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 Roberts Andrew The Duke of Wellington Soldiering to Glory BBC Retrieved 27 November 2009 Discover the Crypt St Paul s Cathedral Retrieved 27 February 2011 Model for Wellington Monument Truth and Falsehood Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 21 September 2014 Journals and magazines A Railer November 1830 Opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railroad Blackwood s Edinburgh Magazine Edinburgh William Blackwood 28 173 827 Davis Richard W 2003 Wellington Parliamentary History 22 1 The Odious Imposts Freeman s Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser Dublin Ireland 14 June 1830 County Meetings Freeman s Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser Dublin Ireland 16 June 1830 Dublin Monday June 28 Freeman s Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser Dublin Ireland 28 June 1830 London Freeman s Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser Dublin Ireland 14 June 1832 Mutiny Bill Catholic Soldiers Hansard XIX 11 March 1811 Sketches of society The late duel The Literary Gazette and Journal of Belles Lettres Arts Sciences H Colburn 1829 Retrieved 9 February 2020 Jerdan William Workman William Ring Morley John Arnold Frederick Goodwin Charles Wycliffe 1832 Raising of the Anglo Indian army The Literary Gazette and Journal 711 Retrieved 8 October 2017 Funeral of the Duke of Wellington Announcement of arrangements The Times No 21276 18 November 1852 p 5 col A Funeral of the Duke of Wellington Report of the funderal The Times No 21277 19 November 1852 p 5 col A Primary sourcesWellesley Arthur 1852 Gurwood John ed The dispatches of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington During his various campaigns in India Denmark Portugal Spain the Low Countries and France from 1799 to 1818 Vol I London John Murray Wellesley Arthur 1854 The Speeches of the Duke of Wellington in Parliament Vol I London London W Clowes amp Sons pp 671 674 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Further reading Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Wellington Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Brett James Antony ed 1961 Wellington at War 1794 1815 New York St Martin s Press Bryant Arthur 1972 The Great Duke Or The Invincible General Morrow OCLC 410380 von Clausewitz Carl von Wellesley Arthur First Duke of Wellington 2010 Christopher Bassford Daniel Moran Gregory Pedlow eds On Waterloo Clausewitz Wellington and the Campaign of 1815 Clausewitz com ISBN 978 1 4537 0150 8 This on line text contains Clausewitz s 58 chapter study of the Campaign of 1815 and Wellington s lengthy 1842 essay written in response to Clausewitz as well as supporting documents and essays by the editors von Clausewitz Carl 1999 1827 Feldzug von 1815 Strategische Uebersicht des Feldzugs von 1815 The Campaign of 1815 Strategic Overview of the Campaign of 1815 In Hahlweg Werner ed Schriften Aufsatze Studien Briefe Writings Essays Studies Letters in German Vol 2 Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht pp 936 1118 Coates Berwick 2003 Wellington s Charge A Portrait of the Duke s England London Robson Books ISBN 978 1 86105 653 5 Ellis Peter Berresford 2000 The Celtic Revolution A Study in Anti Imperialism Talybont Wales Y LotraCyf ISBN 978 0 86243 096 2 Goldsmith Thomas The Duke of Wellington and British Foreign Policy 1814 1830 PhD Diss University of East Anglia 2016 online Harrington Jack 2011 Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10885 1 Hilbert Charles 2005 Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington time and conflicts in India on behalf of the British East India Company and the British crown 7 Military Heritage Hutchinson Lester 1964 European Freebooters in Mogul India New York Asia Publishing House Lambert A Politics administration and decision making Wellington and the navy 1828 30 Wellington Studies IV ed C M Woolgar Southampton 2008 pp 185 243 Longford Elizabeth Wellington Pillar of State 1972 vol 2 of her biography online Snow Peter 2010 To War with Wellington from the Peninsula to Waterloo London John Murray ISBN 978 1 84854 103 0 Ward S G P 1957 Wellington s Headquarters A Study of the Administrative Problems in the Peninsula 1809 1814 Oxford University Press Weller Jac 1998 Wellington at Waterloo London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1 85367 339 9 External links EditArthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Records and images from the UK Parliament Collections The life of Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington Duke of Wellington s Regiment West Riding Papers of Arthur Wellesley first Duke of Wellington MS 61 at the University of Southampton Works by Arthur Wellesley at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington at Internet Archive Works by Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington at LibriVox public domain audiobooks More about Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington on the Downing Street website Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by the Duke of Wellington Portraits of Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington at the National Portrait Gallery London Archival material relating to Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington UK National Archives Napoleon and Wellington BBC Radio 4 discussion with Andrew Roberts Mike Broer and Belinda Beaton In Our Time 25 October 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington amp oldid 1131985571, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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