Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Há 1 dia · Wellesley was married by his brother Gerald, a clergyman, to Kitty Pakenham in St George's Church, Dublin, on 10 April 1806. 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.

  2. Há 2 dias · Maratha Confederacy. The Maratha Confederacy, [a] also referred to as the Maratha Empire or the Maratha Kingdom, [6] [7] was an early modern polity in the Indian subcontinent comprising the realms of the Peshwa and four major independent Maratha states [8] [9] who were often subordinate to the former. It was formed in 1674 with the coronation ...

  3. Há 5 dias · Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts. 1. Born. Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, KG, GCB, GCH, PC, FRS, was born in 1769. The exact date of his birth is unsure, but it is usually given as most probably on 1 May, the day before his baptism in Dublin, which was recorded officially. He was the sixth of nine children born to Anne Wellesley ...

    • Looney_Tunes
  4. Arthur Wellesley upvotes ... 260 years ago today, provincial lawyer Carlo Buonaparte and Letizia Ramolino married and fathered thirteen children, ...

  5. Há 3 dias · Anglo-allied Army order of battle. Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington. Combined British, Dutch and Hanoverian forces were under the supreme command of Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington.

  6. Há 5 dias · Question 4 of 15. 4. In 1803, although outnumbered ten to one, General Arthur Wellesley defeated the well trained Mahratta army in one of the fiercest battles in India. It was the first of many victories by the future Duke of Wellington, and 'the bloodiest for the number', he recalled, 'that I ever saw'.

  7. Há 1 dia · Ireland and India: Nationalism, Empire and Memory. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, ISBN: 9780230216747; 272pp.; Price: £55.00. In a 2009 review article on the study of Ireland’s relationship with the British Empire, Stephen Howe lamented the polarity of historiographical opinion surrounding the problems of Irish identity in a British ...