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  1. Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington From a painting of 1854 by George Baxter. When but twelve years of age he lost his father, and little care appears to have been bestowed upon him by his mother, a somewhat harsh woman, who believed the “slender, blue-eyed, hawk-nosed, and rather sheep-faced boy” to be hopelessly deficient in mental ability.

  2. A watercolour depicting a caricatured Arthur, 4th Duke of Wellington wearing sports clothes, full-length in profile to the left. There is an unidentifiable landscape background. This caricature, and those of RCIN 917009 and 914270, have all traditionally been attributed to Arnold Keppel, 8th Earl of Albemarle.

  3. Arthur Charles Wellesley, 4th Duke of Wellington, KG, GCVO, DL (15 March 1849 – 18 June 1934) was a member of the well-known Wellesley family. He joined the military and served in the Household Division. Upon his childless brother's death in 1900, he inherited the family title and estates.

  4. Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington From a painting of 1854 by George Baxter. When but twelve years of age he lost his father, and little care appears to have been bestowed upon him by his mother, a somewhat harsh woman, who believed the “slender, blue-eyed, hawk-nosed, and rather sheep-faced boy” to be hopelessly deficient in mental ability.

  5. Arthur Wellesley, 1e hertog van Wellington (Mornington House, Dublin, 1 mei 1769 – Walmer Castle bij Dover, 14 september 1852 ), bijgenaamd de IJzeren Hertog, was een Brits militair leider, die behoorde tot de protestantse elite in Ierland . Hoewel in Ierland geboren, noemde hij het eiland een land van schurken en was hij van mening dat enkel ...

  6. 27 de jul. de 1999 · Arthur Wellesley, 1st duke of Wellington - Peninsular War, Waterloo, Prime Minister: In opposition, the duke proceeded to thwart Grey’s attempts to get a reform bill through the Lords. Wellington’s windows were twice smashed by radical mobs, and his iron shutters helped form the image of an iron duke. The titanic struggle culminated in the crisis of May 1832, which promised to end like the ...

  7. Arthur Charles Wellesley, 4th Duke of Wellington ('Statesmen. No. 757. "Strathfieldsaye"') by Sir Leslie Ward chromolithograph, published in Vanity Fair 5 March 1903