Wellesley family
| House of Wellesley | |
|---|---|
Wellesley modern Arms: Quarterly: 1st & 4th, Gules, a Cross Argent, in each quarter five Plates saltirewise (Wellesley); 2nd & 3rd, Or, a Lion rampant Gules, ducally gorged Gold (Cowley) | |
| Parent house |
|
| Country | Kingdom of Wessex Kingdom of England Lordship of Ireland Kingdom of Ireland Kingdom of Great Britain United Kingdom Kingdom of Portugal Kingdom of Spain Kingdom of Belgium Kingdom of the Netherlands |
| Founded | 938 |
| Current head | Charles Wellesley, 9th Duke of Wellington |
| Seat | Stratfield Saye House |
| Titles |
|
| Estates | |
| Cadet branches |
|
The Wellesley family is an Anglo-Irish noble family of Anglo-Saxon heritage. The family was originally from Somerset, deriving its name from the City of Wells in that county, with which they had a close association. The family holds the office of Hereditary Royal Standard Bearer of Ireland, which they initially received through Grand Serjantcy. A Wellesley accompanied King Henry II of England to Ireland in 1172 as his standard bearer during the Hiberno-Norman Invasion and for this service received large grants of land in County Meath and Kildare.
It has been suggested that Guy, the first known Wellesley was made a Thegn by King Athelstan in 938 and he is said to have resided near Wells in Somerset. Furthermore, the manor of Wellesley, located in Somerset, was expressly mentioned in a charter of Edward the Confessor to the Church of Wells in 1065. In the reign of Henry I, Avenant de Wellesley was King's serjeant of all the country lying east of the river Parret in Somersetshire.
According to Burke's Peerage, the Wellesley lineage can be directly traced to Waleran de Wellesley who became first itinerant justice of Ireland in 1255. It is generally accepted that he was the first member of the family to permanently settle in Ireland. A close descendant, Sir William de Wellesley was given custody of Kildare castle by Edward II and was summoned to Parliament in 1339, receiving the title of Baron Noragh. However, the Wellesley family became extinct in the male line with the death of Garret Wesley in 1728 so a royal licence was obtained, allowing the estates and arms to be inherited by a cousin Richard Colley. Richard descended from the Wellesley's family through female line, as is shown bellow.
- Waleran de Wellesley, Justice Itinerant (died 1276)
- Waleran de Wellesley of Brianstown (died 1303)
- Sir John de Wellesley, Sheriff of Kildare
- Sir John de Wellesley (2)
- Sir William de Wellesley, Lord Wellesley
- Sir Richard de Wellesley, Sheriff of Kildare
- William de Wellesley
- Waleran Wellesley
- Gerald Wellesley
- James Wellesley of Newcastle Macormigan
- Edward Wellesley
- John Wellesley
- John Wellesley
- Christopher Wellesley of Dangan (died 1464)
- Sir William Wellesley of Dangan (died 1502)
- Gerald Wellesley of Dangan and Mornington
- William Wellesley of Dangan and Mornington
- Gerald Wellesley of Dangan and Mornington
- William Wellesley of Dangan and Mornington
- Alison Wellesley
- Sir Thomas Cusack, Lord Chancellor of Ireland (1490-1571)
- Catherine Cusack (died 1597/98)
- Sir Henry Colley
- Sir Henry Colley M.P (died 1637)
- Dudley Colley M.P (1621-1674
- Henry Colley (died 1719)
- Richard Wesley, 1st Baron Mornington (1690-1758)
- Garret Wellesley,1st Earl of Mornington (1735-1781)
- Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley (1760–1842)
- William Wellesley-Pole, 3rd Earl of Mornington (1763–1845)
- Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, (1769–1852)
- Gerald Wellesley (1770–1848)
- Henry Wellesley, 1st Baron Cowley (1773–1847)
- Garret Wellesley,1st Earl of Mornington (1735-1781)
- Richard Wesley, 1st Baron Mornington (1690-1758)
- Henry Colley (died 1719)
- Dudley Colley M.P (1621-1674
- Sir Henry Colley M.P (died 1637)
- Sir Henry Colley
- Catherine Cusack (died 1597/98)
- Sir Thomas Cusack, Lord Chancellor of Ireland (1490-1571)
- Gerald Wellesley of Dangan and Mornington
- Edmund de Wellesley
- Sir William Wellesley of Dangan (died 1502)
- Sir Richard de Wellesley, Sheriff of Kildare
- Sir William de Wellesley, Lord Wellesley
- Sir John de Wellesley (2)
- William de Wellesley, Constable of Kildare Castle
- Sir William de Wellesley, Lord of Norragh
- Sir John de Wellesley, Sheriff of Kildare
- Waleran de Wellesley of Brianstown (died 1303)