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Wellington: A Personal History
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Table of Contents

17691815 * Eton, Dublin and Angers, 176987 * An Officer in the 33rd, 178793 * The First Campaign, 17945 * A Voyage to India, 17968 * The Tiger of Mysore, 1799 * The Governor of Mysore, 1799 * The Sultans Palace, 18001 * Assaye, 18025 * Return to London, 18056 * Kitty Pakenham, 17901806 * Ireland and Denmark, 18067 * Portugal, 1808 * Board of Enquiry, 1808 * Across the Douro, 1809 * A Whole Host of Marshals, 180910 * From Bussaco to El Bodon, 181011 * Life at Headquarters, 181012 * Badajoz, Salamanca and Madrid, 1812 * Retreat to Portugal, 1812 * From Vitoria to the Frontier, 181213 * St Jean de Luz, 1813 * In London Again, 1814 * Paris and Vienna, 181415 * Brussels, 1815 * Waterloo, 1815 181552 * The Ambassador, 1815 * Cambrai and Vitry, 181518 * Stratfield Saye, 181820 * King George IV and Queen Caroline, 18201 * Husband and Wife, 1821 * Vienna and Verona, 18224 * St Petersburg and the Northern Counties, * The Prime Minister, 18289 * Battersea Fields and Scotland Yard, 1829 * The Death of the King, 182930 * Riots and Repression, 18302 * A Bogy to the Mob, 1832 * Oxford University and Apsley House, 18324 * Lady Friends, 1834 * The Foreign Secretary, 18346 * Portraits and Painters, 183050 * Life at Walmer Castle, 183050 * The Young Queen, 18379 * Grand Old Man, 183950 * The Horse Guards and the House of Lords, 184250 * Hyde Park Corner, 18456 * Disturbers of the Peace, 184651 * Growing Old, 18501 * Last Days, 18512 * The Way to St Pauls, 1852

About the Author

Christopher Hibbert has written many well-received biographies, including, most recently, Queen Victoria. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and an Honorary Doctor of Letters of Leicester University.

Reviews

One of history's great captains, Sir Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington (1769-1852) was also a dominant figure in Britain's public life. In this graceful and well-researched life, Hibbert (Nelson) nevertheless limits his treatment of the duke as soldier and statesman in favor of concentrating on his personality and behavior. The duke was a man of manners rather than feelings, according to Hibbert, a man who understood the rules of a Britain governed, even at the height of the Napoleonic threat, by an oligarchy of birth and deference. His relationships with his wife and children were, at best, remote. If he ever had a "friend of the heart," male or female, it has escaped Hibbert's notice. Nor did Wellington wax sentimental over the men in his ranks. But he understood their capacities as soldiers, saw to their material needs and eventually led them to victory over an army that had been for two decades the master of Europe's battlefields. With significant insight, Hibbert shows how, throughout the duke's long, post-1815 career, Wellington's roles were shaped by his status as the conqueror of Napoleon. As a diplomat, as prime minister from 1828 to 1830, as senior advisor to successive governments and commander-in-chief of the army, Wellington expected deference, and developed an increasingly impervious faith in his own judgments. His status as an archetype nevertheless endured until his death‘and even longer in an army that required the multiple shocks of the Crimean War to begin modifying the Iron Duke's presumed legacy. (Sept.)

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