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House of Orange-Nassau

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Dutch Royalty
House of Nassau (Orange branch)


William I
Children
William II
Prince Frederick
Princess Charlotte
Marianne, Princess Albert of Prussia
Grandchildren
Wilhelmina Frederika, Queen of Sweden and Norway
Prince Willem Nicolaas Karel
Prince Willem Frederik Nicolaas Albert
   Marie, Princess of Wied
William II
Children
William III
Prince Alexander
Prince Henry
Prince Ernst
Sophie, Grand Duchess of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach
William III
Children
   William, Prince of Orange
Prince Maurits
   Alexander, Prince of Orange
Wilhelmina
Wilhelmina
Children
Juliana
Juliana
Children
Beatrix
Princess Irene
Princess Margriet
Princess Christina
Beatrix
Children
   Willem-Alexander, Prince of Orange
Prince Johan-Friso
Prince Constantijn
Grandchildren
Princess Catharina-Amalia
Princess Alexia
Countess Luana
Countess Zaria
Countess Eloise
Count Claus-Casimir
Countess Leonore

The House of Orange-Nassau (in Dutch: Van Oranje-Nassau), a branch of the House of Nassau, has played a central role in the political life of the Netherlands since William I of Orange (also known as "William the Silent" and "Father of the Fatherland") organised the Dutch revolt against Spanish rule, which after the Eighty Years' War led to an independent Dutch state.

Several members of the house served during this war and after as governor or stadtholder (Dutch stadhouder). However, in 1815, after a long period as a republic, the Netherlands became a monarchy under the House of Orange-Nassau.

The dynasty was established as a result of the marriage between Hendrik III of Nassau-Breda from Germany and Claudia of Châlon-Orange from French Burgundy. Their son René of Châlon first adopted the new family name "Orange-Nassau". William I was his nephew and successor.

In the late 17th century, the family also supplied a British monarch, King William III who is credited with causing the Glorious Revolution. Orangemen around the world still celebrate his endeavors every year in a colourful, although sometimes controversial, Orange Order folk festival commonly called "The Twelfth". Some members of the Orange Order also belong to various outlawed loyalist paramilitary/terrorist groups in Northern Ireland.

Early history: the House of Nassau

The first person to be called count of Nassau was Henry I, who lived in the first half of the 13th century. His sons Walram and Otto split the Nassau possessions. The descendants of Walram became known as the Walram Line, which became important in the Nassau county. The descendants of Otto became known as the Otton Line, which inherited parts of the Nassau county, France and the Netherlands.

The House of Orange-Nassau stem from the Otton Line. The second person was Engelbert I, who offered his services to the Duke of Burgundy, married a Dutch noblewoman and inherited lands in the Netherlands, with the barony of Breda as the core of the Dutch possessions.

The importance of the Nassaus grew throughout the 15th and 16th century. Hendrik III of Nassau-Breda was appointed stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland by Charles of Ghent in the beginning of the 16th century. Henry was succeeded by René of Châlon-Orange in 1538, who was, as his full name stated, Prince of Orange. When René died prematurely on the battlefield in 1544 his possessions passed to his nephew, William I of Orange. From then on the family members called themselves "Orange-Nassau."

William of Orange was befriended by Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and his son Philip.

The Dutch rebellion

Although Charles V resisted the Reformation, he ruled the Dutch territories wisely with moderation and regard for local customs, and he did not persecute his Protestant subjects on a large scale. Unfortunately, his son Philip II inherited his antipathy for the Protestants but not his moderation. Under the reign of Philip, a true persecution of Protestants was initiated and taxes were raised to an outrageous level. Discontent arose and William of Orange (with his vague Lutheran childhood) stood up for the Protestant (mainly Calvinist) inhabitants of the Netherlands. Things went badly after the Eighty Years' War started in 1568, but luck turned in his advantage when Protestant rebels attacking from the North Sea captured Brielle, a coastal town in present-day South Holland in 1572. Many cities in Holland began to support William. During the 1570s he had to defend his core territories in Holland several times, but in the 1580s the inland cities in Holland were secure. William of Orange was considered a threat to Spanish rule in the area and was assassinated in 1584 by a hired killer sent by Philip.

William was succeeded by his second son Maurits, a Protestant who proved an excellent military commander. His abilities as a commander and the lack of strong leadership in Spain after the death of Philip II (1598) gave Maurits excellent opportunities to conquer large parts of the present-day Dutch territory.

Maurits was created stadtholder (military commander) of the Dutch Republic in 1585. In the early years of the 17th century there arose quarrels between stadtholder and oligarchist regents — a group of powerful merchants led by Johan van Oldebarnevelt — because Maurits wanted more powers in the Republic. Maurits won this power struggle by arranging the judicial murder of Oldebarnevelt.

Expansion of dynastic power

Maurits died unmarried in 1625 and left no legitimate children. He was succeeded by his half-brother Frederick Henry (Dutch: Frederik Hendrik), youngest son of William I. Maurits urged his successor on his deathbed to marry as soon as possible. A few weeks after Maurits's death he married Amalia van Solms-Braunfels. Frederick Henry and Amalia had a son and several daughters. These daughters were married to important houses such as the house of Hohenzollern, but also to the Frisian Nassaus, who were stadtholders in Friesland. His only son William wedded Mary, the eldest daughter of Charles I of England. These dynastic moves were the work of Amalia.

Exile and resurgence

Frederick Henry died in 1647 and his son succeeded him. As the Treaty of Munster was about to be signed, thereby ending the Eighty Years War, William tried to extend his powers beyond the military to make his function valuable at peace, at the great distress of the regents. When the regents of the city of Amsterdam refused some mayors he appointed, he besieged Amsterdam. The siege provoked the wrath of the regents and, unfortunately, William died of smallpox on November 6, 1650, leaving only a posthumous son, William (*November 14, 1650). As there was no Prince of Orange at the death of William II, the regents used the opportunity to let the stadtholdership vacant. The newborn prince was exiled to a disgraceful life. A quarrel about the education of the young prince arose between his mother and his grandmother Amalia (who outlived her husband for 28 years). Amalia wanted an education which was pointed at the resurgence of the House of Orange to power, but Mary wanted a pure English education. The Estates of Holland meddled in the education and made William a "child of state" educated by the state. The doctrine used in this education was keeping William from rule. William became indeed very docile to the regents and the Estates.

The Dutch Republic was attacked by France and England in 1672. The military function of stadtholder was no longer superfluous and William was restored, and became stadtholder as William III. William successfully repelled the invasion and seized power. He became more powerful than his predecessors during the Eighty Years War. In 1677 William married Mary Stuart, daughter to future king James II. In 1688 William embarked on a mission to depose his Catholic father-in-law from the English throne. He and his wife were crowned King and Queen of England on April 11, 1689. With the accession to the English throne he became the most powerful sovereign on Earth, the only one to defeat the Sun King. Many members of the House of Orange were devoted admirers of the King-Stadtholder afterwards. He died childless after a riding accident on March 8, 1702, leaving the House of Orange extinct and England to Anne.

The second stadtholderless era

The regents found that they had suffered under the powerful leadership of William III and declared the stadtholdership vacant for the second time. The main reason was a quarrel about the title Prince of Orange between John William Friso of the Frisian Nassaus, appointed heir in William III's will, and the King of Prussia. The King of Prussia, Friedrich I was the rightful heir by blood, grandson to Frederick Henry in the maternal line and appointed successor in the will of Frederick Henry in the case the House would die out. The solution was that both claimants were allowed to bear the title. The problem of the lands solved itself as the principality of Orange was conquered by Louis XIV in 1713. John William Friso drowned in 1711 in the Hollands Diep near Moerdijk and left a posthumous son William IV. He was proclaimed stadtholder of Gelderland, Overijssel, Drenthe and Utrecht in 1722. When the French invaded in 1747 William was restored as stadtholder of the whole Dutch Republic, hereditary in both male and female line.

The end of the republic

William died in 1751, leaving his three years old son Willem V as stadtholder. As Willem V was still a minor, the regents ruled for him. Unfortunately, the regents once again deliberately weakened the character of the future ruler, educating him to be indecisive. It would pursue Willem during his whole life. His marriage to Wilhelmina of Prussia relieved this flaw to some degree. Willem's inability to rule properly was a small factor in the collapse of the Dutch Republic, the larger issue being the corrupt regents. In 1787 he survived a coup from Patriots (democratic revolutionaries) after Prussia intervened. When the French invaded in 1795 he had to flee, and was never to return.

After 1795 the House of Orange-Nassau faced a difficult period, surviving in exile at other European courts, especially those of Prussia and England. Willem V died in 1806.

The monarchy (1815–)

A new spirit: the United Kingdom of the Netherlands

When the French Empire collapsed in 1813, Willem Frederik, son of William V, returned to the Netherlands to become Prince Sovereign William I. This move was strongly supported by the United Kingdom, which sought ways to strengthen the Netherlands and deny future French aggressors easy access to the Low Countries' Channel ports. In 1815 Belgium and Luxembourg were added to his realm and William ruled over the then United Kingdom of the Netherlands, trying to establish one common culture, provoking the resistance in the southern parts of his new realm. Due to this expansion of territory the Principality of the Netherlands became a Kingdom on 15 March 1815. The Prince of Orange held rights to Napoleon-grabbed Nassauer lands (Dillenburg, Dietz, Beilstein, Hadamar, Siegen) in Central Germany, on the other hand the King of Prussia had beginning from 1813 managed to establish his rule in duchy of Luxembourg which he regarded as his inheritance from Anne, Duchess of Luxembourg who had died over three centuries earlier, her ancestral duchy having been annexed by Duke of Burgundy. The brothers-in-law and first cousins, Orange and Prussia, made an exchange, sealed by the congress of Vienna: Prussia received the Nassauer lands of Prince of Orange, and he received Luxembourg, now elevated to a Grand Duchy. Both got what was geographically nearer to their center of power.

In 1830 Belgium declared its independence and William fought a disastrous war until 1839 when he was forced to settle for peace. With his realm halved, he decided to abdicate in 1840. Royal power was curbed during the reign of his son William II in a constitution ordered by the King to prevent the Revolution of 1848 from spreading to his country.

William III and the threat of extinction

William II died in 1849. He was succeeded by his son, King William III, a conservative, even reactionary man. William III was sharply opposed to the 1848 constitution and constantly tried to form his own royal governments. In 1868, he tried to sell Luxembourg to France, causing a quarrel between Prussia and France.

William III had an unhappy marriage with Sophie von Württemberg and his heirs died young, which began to raise the possibility of the extinction of the House of Orange-Nassau. After the death of Sophie in 1877, William married Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont in 1879. A year later, Queen Emma gave birth to a daughter and heiress, Wilhelmina. Upon William's death in 1890, the House of Orange became extinct in the male line.

As females weren't allowed to hold power in Luxembourg due to the Salic law, the Grand Duchy passed to the House of Nassau-Weilburg, a collateral line. The problem of total extinction remained until 1909, when Juliana was born. The royal house remained small until the end of the 1930s and the early 1940s, when Juliana's four children were born.

A modern monarchy

Wilhelmina ruled the Netherlands for fifty years, from 1898 to 1948. She was a symbol of the Dutch resistance during the Second World War. The moral authority of the monarchy was restored because of her rule. After fifty years, she decided to abdicate in favour of Juliana. Juliana made the monarchy less aloof and under her rule the monarchy became known as the "cycling monarchy" as the members of the royal family cycled often through the countryside. A marital policy quarrel occurred in 1966 when future queen Beatrix wanted to marry Claus von Amsberg, a German diplomat. A marriage of a royal with a German was controversial that may have been exacerbated by von Amsberg's former membership in the Hitler Youth and later service in the Wehrmacht. Permission from the government was granted and Beatrix married him. Claus became the most popular member of the royal family; he died in 2002. On April 30th 1980 Juliana abdicated in favor of her daughter Beatrix. Beatrix' government has proven to be more professional and more aloof than Juliana's. At present, the monarchy is popular with a large part of the population. The Crown Prince Willem-Alexander is married to Máxima, they have two young daughters Catharina-Amalia and Alexia.

Juliana died on the 20 March 2004 and Prince Bernhard died on the 1 December 2004.

See also

External link

 


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