Soestdijk Palace

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Soestdijk Palace, where Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard lived for over six decades.
Soestdijk Palace, where Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard lived for over six decades.

Soestdijk Palace is one of the four official palaces of the Dutch royal family. It consists of a central block and two wings.

Although named after the village of Soestdijk, which is largely in the municipality of Soest, the Soestdijk Palace is just north of the border in the municipality of Baarn in the province of Utrecht. It was the home for over six decades of the late Princess Juliana and her husband, the late Prince Bernhard until their deaths in 2004.

The palace originally started as a hunting lodge that was built for Stadhouder William III between 1674 and 1678 by Maurits Post, who was also involved in building two other royal palaces, Huis ten Bosch Palace and Noordeinde Palace. William left the Netherlands in 1688 to reside in London as William III of England.

During the french invasion in 1795, the palace was seized as a spoil of war and turned into an inn for French troops. When Louis Napoleon became king of Holland, he took possession of it and had it extended and refurbished.

It was presented to William II of the Netherlands in 1815 in recognition of his services at the Battle of Waterloo. In 1842 its contents were enriched by the addition of the neoclassical furnishings of his former palace in Brussels, today the Palais des Académies.

Soestdijk became the property of the State of the Netherlands in 1971, though it was used by Princess Juliana and Prince Bernhard as their official residence until both of their deaths in 2004. Since the deaths of Princess Juliana and Prince Bernhard, Soestdjik palace has remainded empty and closed to the public; this will change as the State of the Netherlands plans to open Soestdijk Palace to the public at the end of 2006.

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Royal Palaces in the Netherlands
Official residences: Koninklijk Palace | Noordeinde Palace | Soestdijk Palace | Huis ten Bosch

Former residences: Het Loo | Mauritshuis