William III of the Netherlands
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William III | |
King of the Netherlands Grand Duke of Luxembourg Duke of Limburg |
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Reign | 1849-1890 |
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Born | February 17, 1817 |
Birthplace | Brussels |
Died | November 23, 1890 (aged 73) |
Place of death | Het Loo, near Apeldoorn |
Buried | Nieuwe Kerk, Delft |
Predecessor | William II of the Netherlands |
Successor | Wilhelmina of the Netherlands |
Consort | i) Sophie of Württemberg ii) Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont |
Issue | William Maurice Alexander Wilhelmina |
Royal House | House of Orange-Nassau |
Royal anthem | Wilhelmus |
Father | William II of the Netherlands |
Mother | Anna Pavlovna of Russia |
William III (Willem Alexander Paul Frederik Lodewijk van Oranje-Nassau, anglicised: William Alexander Paul Frederick Louis of Orange-Nassau) (February 19, 1817 – November 23, 1890) was from 1849 King of the Netherlands and Grand Duke of Luxembourg until his death and the Duke of Limburg until the abolition of the Duchy in 1866.
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[edit] Early life
William was born in Brussels as son of William II of the Netherlands and Queen Anna Paulowna, daughter of Tsar Paul I of Russia and Empress Maria Fyodorovna (Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg). In his early years, he served in the military.
He married his first cousin, Sophie, daughter of King William I of Württemberg and Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia, in 1839. This marriage was unhappy and was characterized by struggles about their children. Sophie was a liberal intellectual, hating everything leaning toward dictatorship, such as the army. William was simpler, more conservative, and loved the military. He prohibited intellectual exercise at home, for which action Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, who corresponded with Sophie, called him an uneducated farmer. (His extramarital enthusiasms, however, led the New York Times to call him "the greatest debauchee of the age".) Another cause of marital tension (and later political tension) was his capriciousness; he could rage against someone one day, and be extremely polite the next.
William loathed the 1848 constitutional changes initiated by his father (William II) and Johan Rudolf Thorbecke. William II and Sophie saw them as key to the monarchy's survival in changing times. William himself saw them as useless limitations of royal power, and wished to govern like his grandfather, William I.
He tried to relinquish his right to the throne to his younger brother Henry. His mother convinced him to cancel this action. One year later (1849) William became King upon the death of his father.
[edit] Reign
William repeatedly contemplated abdicating as soon as his son turned eighteen. This occurred in 1858, but as William was uncomfortable making a decision he remained King. His first act was the inauguration of the parliamentary cabinet of Thorbecke, the liberal designer of the 1848 constitution, whom William loathed.
When the Roman Catholic hierarchy of bishops was restored in 1853 he found a reason to dismiss his rival. In the first two decades of his reign, he dismissed several cabinets and disbanded the States-General several times, installing royal cabinets which ruled briefly as there was no support in elected parliament.
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He tried to sell the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg in 1867. The attempt nearly caused a war between Prussia and France, and helped make Luxembourg a fully-independent country.
William was popular with the ordinary people, presenting himself as a cordial man.
In 1877, Sophie died and years of war in the palace came to an end. In 1879, William decided to marry Princess Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont, a small German principality. Some politicians were quite angry, as she was 41 years the king's junior. Emma showed herself, however, as a cordial woman; and when William asked permission from parliament, this was easily granted and the couple were quickly married. She was not his first choice. He had previously been rejected by her sister, Princess Pauline of Waldeck and Pyrmont, as well as Princess Thyra of Denmark, a sister of England's Princess of Wales (later Queen Alexandra) and of Empress Marie Feodorovna of Russia.
Emma had a relieving influence on William's capricious personality and the marriage was extremely happy. The last decade was without any doubt the best of his reign. In 1880, Wilhelmina was born. She became heiress in 1884 after the death of the last remaining son from William's first marriage. Many potential heirs had died between 1878 and 1884, and the tomb in the Nieuwe Kerk in Delft was never opened so many times in history.
William became seriously ill in 1887. He died in 1890. Because Wilhelmina had not yet reached adulthood, Emma became Queen-Regent for her daughter. She would remain Queen regent until Wilhelmina's eighteenth birthday in 1898. Because the Luxembourg Grand Duchy could only be inherited through the male line at the time, under Salic law, it went to Adolphe, the former Duke of Nassau.
[edit] Ancestry
[edit] Children
King William III |
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Of William III's children, only three reached adulthood, two sons from his marriage to Queen Sophie and one daughter from his marriage to Queen Emma:
- Willem Nicolaas Alexander Frederik Karel Hendrik (1840-1879). Heir to the Throne from 1849 till his death.
- Willem Frederik Maurits Alexander Hendrik Karel (1843-1850).
- Willem Alexander Karel Hendrik Frederik (1851-1884). Heir to the Throne from 1879 till his death.
- Wilhelmina Helena Pauline Maria (1880 - 1962). Queen of the Netherlands from 1890 - 1948.
[edit] See also
William III of the Netherlands
Born: 17 February 1817 Died: 23 November 1890 |
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Preceded by William II |
Prince of Orange 1840-1849 |
Succeeded by William |
King of the Netherlands 1849-1890 |
Succeeded by Wilhelmina |
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Grand Duke of Luxembourg 1849-1890 |
Succeeded by Adolphe |
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Duke of Limburg 1849-1866 |
Succeeded by abolition |
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