Remarks:
 EVENT: [Ireland] 
  
 EVENT: [I., 1760] 
  
 EVENT: [Great Britain] 
  
 EVENT: [I., 1746] 
  
 INVEST: Knight, Order of St. Patrick (K.P.) 
  
 OFFICE: M.P. for Trim 
  
 GRADUATION: Glasgow University||honorary Doctor of Laws (LL.D.) 
  
 , he declined the star and badge of the Order of St. Patrick, made from 
 the jewels of Tipoo Sahib, offered to him by the army (he was afraid it 
 might diminsh the prize money he was due) 
  
 OFFICE: M.P. for Beeralston 
  
 OFFICE: M.P. for Saltash 
  
 OFFICE: M.P. for Windsor 
  
 OFFICE: M.P. for Old Sarum 
  
 OFFICE: Custos Rotulorum for County Meath 
  
 INVEST: Privy Counsellor (P.C.) [Ireland] 
  
 INVEST: Privy Counsellor (P.C.) 
  
 OFFICE: a Lord of the Treasury 
  
 OFFICE: a Commissioner for Indian Affairs 
  
 OFFICE: Governor of Madras 
  
 OFFICE: Governor-General of Bengal|| ||During this period, he effected the 
 capture of Seringaputam and the complete destruction of Mysore 
  
 OFFICE: Chief Remembrancer of the Exchequer [Ireland] 
  
 INVEST: Knight of the Crescent of Turkey 
  
 OFFICE: Ambassador to the Centra Junta of Spain 
  
 OFFICE: Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs 
  
 INVEST: Knight, Order of the Garter (K.G.) 
  
 INVEST: Knight of the Lion and Sun of Persia 
  
 OFFICE: Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland||Viceroy 
  
 OFFICE: Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland||Viceroy 
  
 OFFICE: Lord Steward of the Household 
  
 OFFICE: Lord Chamberlain of the Household 
  
 In May 1799 he wrote privately to Lord Grenville: "To talk 
 like Lord Abercorn-you will gain much credit by conferring some high and 
 brilliant honour upon me immediately. The Garter would be much more 
 acceptable to me than any additional title, nor would any title be an 
 object, which should not raise me to the same rank which was given to 
 Lord Cornwallis." He was greatly vexed at not obtaining a Marquessate of 
 Great Britain like his predecessor, Lord Cornwallis, but it was explained 
 to him that the latter was promoted from an Earldom of Great Britain, 
 while in his case the Earldom was of Ireland. On his retirement from 
 public life he sought further promotion. Lord Broughton records him 
 saying to him: "you got 20,000 for me from the Court of Directors; you 
 ought now to get a dukedom for me from the Queen" 
  
 Farington writes "Laurence spoke of Lord Wellesley as having ruined His 
 fortune by His excessive expenses on Women. With all his abilities He has 
 so great a share of vanity that at the age of about 53 Laurence has 
 noticed, when His Lordship sat to him for His Portrait, that his 
 Lips were painted" 
  
 In late life he used to wear his garter, star and ribbon over his 
 dressing gown 
  
 Lord Macauley writes of him in June 1813, "he has made a great and 
 splendid figure in history, and his weaknesses, though they make his 
 character less worthy of respect, make it more interesting as a study" 
  
 P.E. Roberts writes in 1929 that while no doubt his dispatches from India 
 were pompous and inflated, but "they were massivley impressive in their 
 power, their logical force, and their tone of decision... He was an 
 administrator and ruler of wonderful achievement, and glorious capacity"