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  1. Duke of Wellington is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.The name derived from Wellington in Somerset. The title was created in 1814 for Arthur Wellesley, 1st Marquess of Wellington (1769–1852; born as The Hon. Arthur Wesley), the Anglo-Irish military commander who is best known for leading the decisive victory with Field Marshal von Blücher over Napoleon's forces at Waterloo in ...

  2. Florence Wellesley. . ( m. 1871) . Charles Henry Wilson, 1st Baron Nunburnholme, JP, DL (22 April 1833 – 21 October 1907), was a prominent English shipowner who became head of the Thomas Wilson Sons & Co. shipping business. Together with his brother he expanded the activities of the company, into one of the largest in Britain.

  3. Paget was Chief Equerry and Clerk Marshal to the Queen from July 1846 to March 1852, from December 1852 to March 1858, and from June 1859. The office ceased to be a political one from 1866. [5] He was the Commodore of the Royal Thames Yacht Club, 1846–1873, and Vice-Commodore, 1845-1846 and 1874–1888.

  4. Anne Wellesley (mother) Charles William Frederick Cavendish-Bentinck (8 November 1817 – 17 August 1865) was a priest of the Church of England who held livings in Bedfordshire. He was also the maternal grandfather of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and a great-great-grandfather of King Charles III . Bentinck often gave his names as William ...

  5. Duque de Wellington, derivado de Wellington, em Somerset, é um título hereditário e o ducado mais antigo do Pariato do Reino Unido.O primeiro detentor do título foi Arthur Wellesley, 1° Duque de Wellington, (1769–1852), o famoso general e estadista britânico - nascido na Irlanda - que, juntamente com Blücher, derrotou Napoleão Bonaparte na Batalha de Waterloo.

  6. Correspondence with Lord Cowley. No. l. London 1876, OCLC 943710, JSTOR:60235162. Henry Richard Charles Wellesley Cowley, Frederick Arthur Wellesley: The Paris embassy during the Second Empire selections from the papers of Henry Richard Charles Wellesley, 1st earl Cowley, ambassador at Paris, 1852–1867. T. Butterworth, London 1928, OCLC ...