William Frederick of Orange Nassau
Heir to the throne is William Frederick George Lodewijk,
On March 17th in 1849 the second half of the nineteenth century Willem Alexander Paul Frederick Louis, Prince of Orange-Nassau became King of the Netherlands and Grand Duke of Luxembourg until his death in 1890 until the dissolution of the Dutch in 1866.
When he arrived in the South he was greeted by cheering people but he didn't respond which was very unusual.
His health declined even more in the South. The King could no longer do his job and suffered because he could hardly breath. When his son Hendrik came to visit his health improved but when his wife came to visit she was not allowed to see him.
The next day it suddenly went wrong Willem got an attack of shortness of breath. By himself he went to his doctor who told him to sit down in a chair where he died. For several days his wife spent hours with William's body in the room. Willem wanted to be embalmed and then buried in a wooden coffin. On 4 April he was buried in the Royal Tomb in Delft. William II was king until his death and was only 57 years old. He was succeeded by his son William III.
Willem Alexander Paul Frederik Lodewijk as Crown Prince did not accept the new constitution of 1848 and was in constant conflict with his father. His grievance was that this new constitution drastically limited his royal power. On October 8 that year three days before the constitutional provision came into force he wrote to his sister that he was unable to bring this kind of state-dangerous principles into line with his conscience and his task.
"I have come to the following conclusion: to renounce irrevocably and forever in favor of my eldest son of my rights as Prince of Orange and of my rights to the Crown. "
His father tried to convince him that he was wrong by pointing out that the monarchy is a "divine calling" that he could not refuse but William remained at his point of view and even made a request dismiss him as lieutenant general of the infantry. His father also rejected this.
When his father died William was in England for a three-month stay. On the day of his father's death he was in Raby Castle When he got the news that his father had died he had been dead for a day. He was still persuaded to accept the Kingship. His inauguration took place on May 12, 1849.
The Kings health declined in 1888. In February 1889 he was no longer able to sign state documents with his initials and William was declared 'out of state' and the Council of State took over his duties.
William recovered and the regency was reversed. When he stayed at Paleis Het Loo his state of health got worse again. According to his doctor he had a stroke' and would no longer be able to leave the palace.
The king suffered from severe kidney disease and diabetes and became so confused that he started signing state papers with non existing made up names and always had to keep someone from the court near to him because he was afraid to be murdered in his sleep. In August 1890 he got another stroke and on 25 September his ten year old daughter saw him for the last time. William was again declared 'out of state' and the Council of State took up his duties for the second time. On November 20th his wife Emma took over the Royal authority. This regency lasted only a few days because on 23 November 1890 the King died at the age of 73 years old. The monarchy then passed to the ten-year-old Princess Wilhelmina for which Emma was sworn into regent on December 8, 1890 "during her marriage".
Queen Juliana is born on April 30, 1909. Queen Juliana resigns from the throne in 1980. Her daughter Beatrix follows her. There are then three generations of queens in the Netherlands. Juliana passed away in 2004
(1967)
On 7 December 2003 Princess Catharina-Amalia the first daughter of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima was born on June 26, 2005 their second daughter Princess Alexia was born the third daughter and Princess Ariane was born on 10 April 2007.
All pictures and information:
Netherlands Government Information Service
Other sources Dutch Monarchy
Interesting post, you made them seem more like real people than only names in a history book.
I'm interested in the Dutch Royals because I live in the town where Emma met her husband-to-be. It is said that he went looking for a wife late in life and Emma's elder sister was the prospect he wanted to meet. But when the king got out of the carriage in front of the castle building allegedly said sister found him much too old. Emma though must have been a genuinely nice person because purportedly she thought that they couldn't "send the old man away empty-handed". And that's how she became Queen of the Netherlands ;)
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Interesting! I will look into that although details are always hidden somehow. But yes Kings are real people too. Now just a formality with no real influence. A lot of people complain about the monarchy because it cost a lot of tax money keeping up the palaces and buildings and the income of the royal family.
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Why do you put up with these people stealing your money through taxes only to be deemed a serf and subject to a caste system?
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Yes that is a dilemma especially for the younger generation. And yes it costs lot of tax money. And since you are investigating Illuminati, our former Queen was/is member of the Bilderberg group also very interesting. But this monarchy will probably never end, not in my time for sure so it's better to give them the money and maintain their lives and property then some otters of the one percent because they steal our money anyway one way or the other.
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We are all subjects to someone or something; Napoleon was a great man, to bad he lost at Waterloo.
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I did not know most of that . good informational post , I really enjoyed it and I must say will read it again to insure I didn't miss anything , thank you
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Thank you @wolfhart. I enjoyed writing it and do the research especially on Kingsday. I love history and It was good to even educate myself some more about our Kings. I am a descendant of King Charles III of France . Maybe I do an article on that in the future. Thank you for reading.
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