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Duke of Victoria

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(Redirected from Marquess of Torres Vedras) Portuguese title of nobility Not to be confused with Duke of la Victoria (title) or Duke of Victoria de las Amezcoas. For other uses, see Duke of Victoria (disambiguation).

Duke of Victoria
Duque da Vitória

Arms of the Dukes of Wellington as Duke of Victoria.
Creation date18 December 1812
Created byPrince Regent John of Portugal (later King John VI)
PeeragePeerage of Portugal
First holderArthur Wellesley, 1st Marquess of Wellington
Present holderCharles Wellesley, 9th Duke of Wellington
Heir apparentArthur Wellesley, Earl of Mornington
Remainder tothe 1st Duke's heirs male of the body lawfully begotten
Subsidiary titles
  • Marquess of Torres Vedras
  • Count of Vimeiro

Duke of Victoria (Portuguese: Duque da Vitória, lit.'Victorious duke, or Duke of the victory') is a Portuguese title of nobility retained by the Duke of Wellington.

The title was created by Prince Regent John of Portugal (later King John VI) on 18 December 1812 to honour the British General Arthur Wellesley, who commanded the armies that eventually defeated the troops of Emperor Napoleon I of France in the Peninsular War. It was the only grant of a Portuguese dukedom to a foreigner.

Arthur Wellesley had already received the Portuguese titles Conde de Vimeiro (Count of Vimeiro, 18 October 1811) and Marquês de Torres Vedras (Marquess of Torres Vedras, 17 December 1812), which became titles subsidiary to that of Duque da Vitória. He also received the British peerage title Duke of Wellington, and other titles and honours from the United Kingdom, Spain, and the Netherlands. All these titles have been passed to his heirs to the present day.

Dukes of Victoria since 1812

The heir apparent is the present holder's son Arthur Gerald Wellesley, whose heir apparent is his son Arthur Darcy Wellesley.

Family tree

Wellesley family tree: Dukes of Wellington, Victoria, and Ciudad Rodrigo, and Princes of Waterloo
Baron Mornington of Mornington, 1746
Richard Colley Wesley
1690–1758
1st Baron Mornington
Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley, of Dangan Castle in the County of Meath, 1760
Richard Colley Wesley
1735–1781
1st Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley,
2nd Baron Mornington
Baron Wellesley of Wellesley in the County of Somerset, 1797
Marquess Wellesley of Norragh, 1799
Baron Maryborough of Maryborough in the Queen's County, 1821Viscount Wellington (UK), 1809
Count of Vimeiro (Portugal), 1811
Marquess of Wellington (UK), 1812
Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo (Spain), 1812

Duke of Victoria and Marquess of Torres Vedras (Portugal), 1812
Duke of Wellington (UK) and Marquess Douro and Baron Douro (Portugal), 1814
Prince of Waterloo (Netherlands), 1815
Richard Wellesley
1760–1842
Marquess Wellesley, 2nd Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley, 3rd Baron Mornington, Baron Wellesley
William Wellesley-Pole
1763–1845
3rd Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley, 4th Baron Mornington, 1st Baron Maryborough
Arthur Wellesley
1769–1852
1st Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro
Marquessate Wellesley and Barony Wellesley extinct, 1842
William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley
1788–1857
4th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley, 5th Baron Mornington, 2nd Baron Maryborough
Arthur Richard Wellesley
1807–1884
2nd Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
6th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Lord Charles Wellesley
1808–1858
William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley
1813–1863
5th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley, 6th Baron Mornington, 3rd Baron Maryborough
Henry Wellesley
1846–1900
3rd Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
7th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Arthur Charles Wellesley
1849–1934
4th Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
8th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Barony Maryborough extinct, 1863
Arthur Charles Wellesley
1876–1941
5th Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
9th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Gerald Wellesley
1885–1972
7th Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
8th Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, 10th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Anne Rhys
1910–1998
7th Duchess of Ciudad Rodrigo
Henry Valerian George Wellesley
1912–1943
6th Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
11th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Arthur Valerian Wellesley
1915–2014
8th Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
9th Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, 12th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Arthur Charles Valerian Wellesley
b. 1945
9th Duke of Wellington, Duke of Victoria, Prince of Waterloo, Marquess of Wellington, Marquess of Torres Vedras, Marquess Douro, Viscount Wellington, and Baron Douro,
10th Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo, 13th Earl of Mornington and Viscount Wellesley
Arthur Gerald Wellesley
styled Marquess of Douro
b. 1978
Arthur Darcy Wellesley
b. 2010
styled Earl of Mornington

Use of titles of nobility in the Portuguese Republic

With the end of the Portuguese monarchy in 1910, all titles of Portuguese nobility were initially abolished. Notwithstanding, although the status of nobility has not been recognised in law since 1910, legitimate titles of nobility (those granted by a reigning monarch before 5 October 1910) have been given legal recognition and protection, including under article 26 of the Portuguese Constitution, in conjunction with articles 70 and 72 of the Civil Code, as established by decision of Portugal's Supreme Court of Justice in 2014.

See also

References

  1. "Issue 21388". London Gazette. 6 December 1852. pp. 3563, 3564.
  2. Judgment of the Supreme Court of Justice - website Instituto de Gestão Financeira e Equipamentos da Justiça (IGFEJ) of the Portuguese Ministry of Justice
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