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Coat of arms of the Netherlands

The coat of arms of the Kingdom of the Netherlands was originally adopted in 1815 and later modified in 1907. The arms are a composite of the arms of the former Dutch Republic and the arms of the House of Nassau, it features a checkered shield with a lion grasping a sword in one hand and a bundle of arrows in the other and is the heraldic symbol of the monarch (King Willem-Alexander) and the country. The monarch uses a version of the arms with a mantle (Dutch: Koninklijk wapen) while the government of the Netherlands uses a smaller version without the mantle (cloak) or the pavilion, sometimes only the shield and crown are used (Dutch: Rijkswapen). The components of the coats of arms were regulated by Queen Wilhelmina in a royal decree of 10 July 1907, affirmed by Queen Juliana in a royal decree of 23 April 1980.[1]

Coat of arms of the
Kingdom of the Netherlands
Greater (royal) version
Versions
Middle (state) version
Lesser version
ArmigerWillem-Alexander of the Netherlands
Adopted10 July 1907
23 April 1980[1]
CrestDutch royal Crown
BlazonAzure, billetty Or a lion with a coronet Or armed and langued Gules holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and bound together Or
SupportersTwo lions rampant Or armed and langued Gules
MottoFrench: Je Maintiendrai
Other elementsThe monarch places this coat of arms on a mantle gules lined with Ermine. Above the mantle is a pavilion gules again topped with the royal crown.
Earlier version(s)24 August 1815

Description

The blazon is as follows:

Azure, billetty Or a lion with a coronet Or armed and langued Gules holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and bound together Or. (The seven arrows stand for the seven provinces of the Union of Utrecht.) The shield is crowned with the (Dutch) royal crown and supported by two lions Or armed and langued gules. They stand on a scroll Azure with the text (Or) "Je Maintiendrai" (pronounced [ʒə mɛ̃tjɛ̃dʁe], French for "I shall maintain".)

The monarch places this coat of arms on a mantle gules lined with ermine. Above the mantle is a pavilion gules again topped with the royal crown.

In the royal decree, it is stated that male successors may replace the crown on the shield with a helm with the crest of Nassau.

History and origin of the coat of arms

This version of the coat of arms has been in use since 1907 but differs only slightly from the version that was adopted in 1815. From 1815 until 1907 all the lions wore the royal crown and the supporting lions were facing.

The royal arms were adopted by the first king of The Kingdom of the Netherlands, William I, when he became king after the Congress of Vienna in 1815. As king, he adopted a coat of arms that combined elements of his family’s (Orange-Nassau) coat of arms and that of the former Dutch Republic that existed from 1581 until 1795.

From his family arms he used the azure, billetty or with a lion rampant or of Nassau (blue shield, lion, billets). The "Je Maintiendrai" motto represents the Orange family since it came into the family with the princedom of Orange as "Je Maintiendrai Châlons". These elements are also found in the arms of king William III, who was also king of England, Scotland & Ireland (1689–1702). From the arms of the former States General of the Republic of the United Provinces he took the lion with a coronet, sword and arrows. The arrows symbolize the seven provinces that made up the Republic, the sword the determination to defend their liberty, and the coronet their sovereignty. William replaced the coronet with a royal crown. In 1907, Queen Wilhelmina returned to an open coronet.

Counts of Nassau

 
Coat of arms of Nassau: Azure billetty or, a lion rampant of the last armed and langued gules

The arms of Nassau has existed since about 1250. There are two versions of the Nassau arms, representing the two main branches. This is a result of two brothers, count Walram II and count Otto I, agreeing to divide their father's (Henry II) lands between them in 1255. The line of Walram added a crown to the lion in the Nassau arms to make it different from the lion used by the line of Otto.

The kings and queens of the Netherlands are descendants of count Otto. The Grand Dukes of Luxemburg are descendants of count Walram. They also still use "Nassau" in their arms.[2] Both lines are now extinct in the male line.

The helm and crest that can be used in the Royal arms by the male successors to the throne (and is in fact being used by some male members of the Royal Family) is: "On a (ceremonial) helmet, with bars and decoration Or and mantling Azure and Or, issuing from a coronet Or, a pair of wings joined Sable each with an arched bend Argent charged with three leaves of the lime-tree stems upward Vert".

This crest is used by the descendants of Otto and differs from the crest used by the descendants of Walram. But in the royal decree of 1815 the crest issuing from a crown on the Dutch Royal Arms was the one used by the Walram line. Why this was done is not sure. Maybe due to the "mistake" this crest was hardly used.

The crest of the Walram-line is: Between two trunks Azure billetty Or a sitting lion Or. The trunks are probably a misinterpretation of two cow horns, a crest that is frequently used in German heraldry. On the Grand Coat of Arms of the Grand Duke of Luxemburg the lion is crowned, armed and langued Gules.

The Princedom of Orange

The motto has been used by every "ruling" member of the Nassau family, who was also the prince of Orange since it came into the family with the Princedom of Orange in 1530. Count Henry III of Nassau-Breda, who was living in the Low Countries, was married to Claudia Orange-Châlon. Her brother, Philibert of Châlon, was the last Prince of Orange from the House of Châlon. When he died in 1530, Henry's and Claudia's son René of Nassau-Breda inherited the Princedom on condition that he used the name and coat of arms of the Châlon family. History knows him therefore as René of Châlon. With this inheritance came the "Je Maintiendrai Châlons" motto into the Nassau family. René died in 1544 without leaving a child. His cousin William of Nassau-Dillenburg inherited all of René's lands. William became William of Orange (in English better known under his nickname William the Silent) and the founder of the House of Orange-Nassau. William first changed the motto to "Je Maintiendrai Nassau". Later he (or his sons) dropped the family name from the motto.

The Dutch Republic

The sword and arrows originated from the Habsburg rulers.[citation needed]

 
Great seal of the States General, 1578
 
The banners of the Dutch Republic, the County of Holland and the Kingdom of the Netherlands, hanging from the town hall in Gouda
 
Heraldic achievement of the Dutch Republic, princely crowned, in reference to the sovereignty (independence among nations) of the United Provinces

The lion, as representing the Burgundian Netherlands, first appears as a crest on the tomb of Philip the Handsome. Later Charles V added the sword. The arrows were used, on coins etc., since the early 16th century to represent the Seventeen Provinces in the low countries under control of Charles V. In 1578, during the Eighty Years' War, the States General ordered a new great seal representing the lion, the sword and the 17 arrows combined. Although only seven provinces remained free from Spain, this seal stayed in use until 1795.

After the completion of its forming in 1584 the Republic of the Seven United Provinces used as its arms: Or a crowned lion Gules armed and langued Azure, holding in his dexter paw a sword and in the sinister paw seven arrows tight together Azure. The colours of this version where derived from the most important of the seven provinces, the county of Holland (its arms are still in use since being adopted by the counts of Holland c. 1198).

After c. 1668 the colours where reversed and the arms became Gules a crowned lion Or armed and langued Azure holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and tight together Or.

The arrows symbolize the seven provinces that made up the Republic, the sword the determination to defend their liberty, and the coronet their sovereignty.

1795–1815 Revolution, Napoleonic years and Restoration

In 1795, with French help, the last Stadholder William V was forced to flee and the Batavian Republic (1795–1806) was proclaimed. At first this had no influence on the use of the arms of the former Republic. Then in the following year the lion, that had served for approximately 280 years, was replaced by an allegoric image of a “Dutch maiden of Freedom”. In 1802 the Batavian Republic reverted to the Republican lion, although it doesn't carrying seven arrows.

The replacement of the Batavian Republic with the Kingdom of Holland (1806–1810) was again adopted the lion of the States General. Louis Napoleon Bonaparte (brother of the French Emperor Napoleon) used as King Louis I a coat of arms that quartered the Dutch lion with the French Imperial Eagle. After the emperor Napoleon abolished the Kingdom of Holland in 1810 the lion again had to leave the stage and the Imperial Eagle was the only image in use.

In 1813 the French were forced out of the Netherlands and the son of the last Stadholder, William VI / I was proclaimed 'Sovereign Prince' (1813–1815). To symbolize his new status he assumed a new coat of arms. In it the old lion with the sword and arrows made his second reappearance, now with a Royal crown upon his head. Again it was placed in de prime locations of a quartered shield (I and IV quarter). In the II and III quarter where the arms of Châlon-Orange-Geneve, the arms of Nassau (Otto) where placed on an escutcheon in the center of the shield.

The final retirement of the Republican lion came in 1815 with the establishment of the “United Kingdom of the Netherlands”. Because this new kingdom comprised not only of the lands of the former Dutch Republic but also of the former Austrian or Southern Netherlands it was also not appropriate to continue the use of the old arms. First a combination with the arms of Brabant (Sable a Lion Or, now the coat of arms of Belgium) was considered. In the end the attributes, the sword, arrows and crown, were placed in the care of his older “colleague” from Nassau to symbolize the union between the (now Royal) House of Nassau and the Netherlands. As seen above, this is still the basis of the current coat of arms.

Versions and variants

Government

Various versions of the Dutch Royal Arms are used by Government, the Parliament and courts. Government and its agencies generally use a simplified version of the Royal Arms without the mantle, the pavilion and the topped royal crown.[3] This simplified Royal Arms also feature on the cover of passports,[4] embassies and consulates.[5] The versions used by the Legislature and its chambers shown the Royal Arms with the Royal Crown and a buckled dark-blue strap that bears the name of the Parliament or each chamber Staten-Generaal (States General), Eerste Kamer der Staten-Generaal (Senate), Tweede Kamer der Staten-Generaal (House of Representatives) in gold letters surrounding the shield.[6]

Royal Family

Members of the Dutch Royal Family receive their own personalised arms which are based on the Royal Arms. For more details see Wapen van Nassau, Tak van Otto (in Dutch).

Coats of Arms of the Dutch Royal Family
Coat of arms Bearer Details
Full achievement Escutcheon
    Queen Máxima Oval shield-shaped (usually borne by women), a quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange; over all an escutcheon with the arms of Zorreguieta (paternal arms):

Or, two poplar trees proper flanking a Triple-towered castle Gules, ondoyant to the gate of the castle a river Azure.[7]

    Children of
King Willem-Alexander
(Princesses Catharina-Amalia, Alexia and Ariane)
A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange; over all an escutcheon with the arms of Zorreguieta (maternal arms).[7]
    Children of
Princess Beatrix
(Prince Constantijn)
A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange; over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Amsberg (paternal arms):
Vert, a triple-towered castle argent, on a mount Or.[7]
    Princess Beatrix A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange; over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Lippe (paternal arms):
Argent, a rose Gules barbed and seeded Or.[7]
    Children of
Queen/Princess Juliana
(Princesses Irene, Margriet and Christina)
Oval shield-shaped, a quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange; over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Lippe (paternal arms).[7]
    Children of
Princess Margriet
(Princes Maurits, Bernhard, Pieter-Christiaan and Floris)
A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange; over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Vollenhoven (paternal arms):
Azure, a six-pointed star Argent impaling Or, a deer Gules supported on a tree, the tree on a Mount Vert.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Besluit tot het voeren van het Koninklijk wapen (1908) wetten.nl
  2. ^ (PDF). Service information et presse. 2001. p. 105. ISBN 2-87999-016-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-03-02. Retrieved 2014-02-26.
  3. ^ "Dutch Government website". Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  4. ^ "Paspoortwet, Overheid.nl" (in Dutch). Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  5. ^ "Image of the Dutch Embassy Residence in Helsinki". May 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  6. ^ "Staten-generaal.nl" (in Dutch). Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Dutch Royal Household Website". Retrieved 9 August 2015.

External links

  • Rijkswapen en Koninklijk wapen (in Dutch) Webpage on the High Council of Nobility's official website

coat, arms, netherlands, coat, arms, kingdom, netherlands, originally, adopted, 1815, later, modified, 1907, arms, composite, arms, former, dutch, republic, arms, house, nassau, features, checkered, shield, with, lion, grasping, sword, hand, bundle, arrows, ot. The coat of arms of the Kingdom of the Netherlands was originally adopted in 1815 and later modified in 1907 The arms are a composite of the arms of the former Dutch Republic and the arms of the House of Nassau it features a checkered shield with a lion grasping a sword in one hand and a bundle of arrows in the other and is the heraldic symbol of the monarch King Willem Alexander and the country The monarch uses a version of the arms with a mantle Dutch Koninklijk wapen while the government of the Netherlands uses a smaller version without the mantle cloak or the pavilion sometimes only the shield and crown are used Dutch Rijkswapen The components of the coats of arms were regulated by Queen Wilhelmina in a royal decree of 10 July 1907 affirmed by Queen Juliana in a royal decree of 23 April 1980 1 Coat of arms of the Kingdom of the NetherlandsGreater royal versionVersionsMiddle state versionLesser versionArmigerWillem Alexander of the NetherlandsAdopted10 July 190723 April 1980 1 CrestDutch royal CrownBlazonAzure billetty Or a lion with a coronet Or armed and langued Gules holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and bound together OrSupportersTwo lions rampant Or armed and langued GulesMottoFrench Je MaintiendraiOther elementsThe monarch places this coat of arms on a mantle gules lined with Ermine Above the mantle is a pavilion gules again topped with the royal crown Earlier version s 24 August 1815 Contents 1 Description 2 History and origin of the coat of arms 2 1 Counts of Nassau 2 2 The Princedom of Orange 2 3 The Dutch Republic 2 4 1795 1815 Revolution Napoleonic years and Restoration 3 Versions and variants 3 1 Government 3 2 Royal Family 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDescription EditThe blazon is as follows Azure billetty Or a lion with a coronet Or armed and langued Gules holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and bound together Or The seven arrows stand for the seven provinces of the Union of Utrecht The shield is crowned with the Dutch royal crown and supported by two lions Or armed and langued gules They stand on a scroll Azure with the text Or Je Maintiendrai pronounced ʒe mɛ tjɛ dʁe French for I shall maintain The monarch places this coat of arms on a mantle gules lined with ermine Above the mantle is a pavilion gules again topped with the royal crown In the royal decree it is stated that male successors may replace the crown on the shield with a helm with the crest of Nassau History and origin of the coat of arms EditThis version of the coat of arms has been in use since 1907 but differs only slightly from the version that was adopted in 1815 From 1815 until 1907 all the lions wore the royal crown and the supporting lions were facing The royal arms were adopted by the first king of The Kingdom of the Netherlands William I when he became king after the Congress of Vienna in 1815 As king he adopted a coat of arms that combined elements of his family s Orange Nassau coat of arms and that of the former Dutch Republic that existed from 1581 until 1795 From his family arms he used the azure billetty or with a lion rampant or of Nassau blue shield lion billets The Je Maintiendrai motto represents the Orange family since it came into the family with the princedom of Orange as Je Maintiendrai Chalons These elements are also found in the arms of king William III who was also king of England Scotland amp Ireland 1689 1702 From the arms of the former States General of the Republic of the United Provinces he took the lion with a coronet sword and arrows The arrows symbolize the seven provinces that made up the Republic the sword the determination to defend their liberty and the coronet their sovereignty William replaced the coronet with a royal crown In 1907 Queen Wilhelmina returned to an open coronet Royal arms of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands 1815 1907 Royal standard of the Netherlands 1815 coat of arms with the Walram crest Counts of Nassau Edit Coat of arms of Nassau Azure billetty or a lion rampant of the last armed and langued gules The arms of Nassau has existed since about 1250 There are two versions of the Nassau arms representing the two main branches This is a result of two brothers count Walram II and count Otto I agreeing to divide their father s Henry II lands between them in 1255 The line of Walram added a crown to the lion in the Nassau arms to make it different from the lion used by the line of Otto The kings and queens of the Netherlands are descendants of count Otto The Grand Dukes of Luxemburg are descendants of count Walram They also still use Nassau in their arms 2 Both lines are now extinct in the male line The helm and crest that can be used in the Royal arms by the male successors to the throne and is in fact being used by some male members of the Royal Family is On a ceremonial helmet with bars and decoration Or and mantling Azure and Or issuing from a coronet Or a pair of wings joined Sable each with an arched bend Argent charged with three leaves of the lime tree stems upward Vert This crest is used by the descendants of Otto and differs from the crest used by the descendants of Walram But in the royal decree of 1815 the crest issuing from a crown on the Dutch Royal Arms was the one used by the Walram line Why this was done is not sure Maybe due to the mistake this crest was hardly used The crest of the Walram line is Between two trunks Azure billetty Or a sitting lion Or The trunks are probably a misinterpretation of two cow horns a crest that is frequently used in German heraldry On the Grand Coat of Arms of the Grand Duke of Luxemburg the lion is crowned armed and langued Gules The Princedom of Orange Edit The motto has been used by every ruling member of the Nassau family who was also the prince of Orange since it came into the family with the Princedom of Orange in 1530 Count Henry III of Nassau Breda who was living in the Low Countries was married to Claudia Orange Chalon Her brother Philibert of Chalon was the last Prince of Orange from the House of Chalon When he died in 1530 Henry s and Claudia s son Rene of Nassau Breda inherited the Princedom on condition that he used the name and coat of arms of the Chalon family History knows him therefore as Rene of Chalon With this inheritance came the Je Maintiendrai Chalons motto into the Nassau family Rene died in 1544 without leaving a child His cousin William of Nassau Dillenburg inherited all of Rene s lands William became William of Orange in English better known under his nickname William the Silent and the founder of the House of Orange Nassau William first changed the motto to Je Maintiendrai Nassau Later he or his sons dropped the family name from the motto The Dutch Republic Edit Further information Dutch Republic Lion The sword and arrows originated from the Habsburg rulers citation needed Great seal of the States General 1578 The banners of the Dutch Republic the County of Holland and the Kingdom of the Netherlands hanging from the town hall in Gouda Heraldic achievement of the Dutch Republic princely crowned in reference to the sovereignty independence among nations of the United Provinces The lion as representing the Burgundian Netherlands first appears as a crest on the tomb of Philip the Handsome Later Charles V added the sword The arrows were used on coins etc since the early 16th century to represent the Seventeen Provinces in the low countries under control of Charles V In 1578 during the Eighty Years War the States General ordered a new great seal representing the lion the sword and the 17 arrows combined Although only seven provinces remained free from Spain this seal stayed in use until 1795 After the completion of its forming in 1584 the Republic of the Seven United Provinces used as its arms Or a crowned lion Gules armed and langued Azure holding in his dexter paw a sword and in the sinister paw seven arrows tight together Azure The colours of this version where derived from the most important of the seven provinces the county of Holland its arms are still in use since being adopted by the counts of Holland c 1198 After c 1668 the colours where reversed and the arms became Gules a crowned lion Or armed and langued Azure holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and tight together Or The arrows symbolize the seven provinces that made up the Republic the sword the determination to defend their liberty and the coronet their sovereignty 1795 1815 Revolution Napoleonic years and Restoration Edit See also Netherlands Maiden In 1795 with French help the last Stadholder William V was forced to flee and the Batavian Republic 1795 1806 was proclaimed At first this had no influence on the use of the arms of the former Republic Then in the following year the lion that had served for approximately 280 years was replaced by an allegoric image of a Dutch maiden of Freedom In 1802 the Batavian Republic reverted to the Republican lion although it doesn t carrying seven arrows The replacement of the Batavian Republic with the Kingdom of Holland 1806 1810 was again adopted the lion of the States General Louis Napoleon Bonaparte brother of the French Emperor Napoleon used as King Louis I a coat of arms that quartered the Dutch lion with the French Imperial Eagle After the emperor Napoleon abolished the Kingdom of Holland in 1810 the lion again had to leave the stage and the Imperial Eagle was the only image in use In 1813 the French were forced out of the Netherlands and the son of the last Stadholder William VI I was proclaimed Sovereign Prince 1813 1815 To symbolize his new status he assumed a new coat of arms In it the old lion with the sword and arrows made his second reappearance now with a Royal crown upon his head Again it was placed in de prime locations of a quartered shield I and IV quarter In the II and III quarter where the arms of Chalon Orange Geneve the arms of Nassau Otto where placed on an escutcheon in the center of the shield The final retirement of the Republican lion came in 1815 with the establishment of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands Because this new kingdom comprised not only of the lands of the former Dutch Republic but also of the former Austrian or Southern Netherlands it was also not appropriate to continue the use of the old arms First a combination with the arms of Brabant Sable a Lion Or now the coat of arms of Belgium was considered In the end the attributes the sword arrows and crown were placed in the care of his older colleague from Nassau to symbolize the union between the now Royal House of Nassau and the Netherlands As seen above this is still the basis of the current coat of arms Dutch maiden of freedom as used on naval flags 1797 1806 Seal of the Batavian Republic 1796 1802 Seal of the Batavian Commonwealth 1802 1806 Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Holland second design Coat of arms of William I as sovereign prince 1813 1815Versions and variants EditGovernment Edit Various versions of the Dutch Royal Arms are used by Government the Parliament and courts Government and its agencies generally use a simplified version of the Royal Arms without the mantle the pavilion and the topped royal crown 3 This simplified Royal Arms also feature on the cover of passports 4 embassies and consulates 5 The versions used by the Legislature and its chambers shown the Royal Arms with the Royal Crown and a buckled dark blue strap that bears the name of the Parliament or each chamber Staten Generaal States General Eerste Kamer der Staten Generaal Senate Tweede Kamer der Staten Generaal House of Representatives in gold letters surrounding the shield 6 Version used by the Dutch government Stylized version used as wordmark by all branches of the Dutch government Version used by the States General parliament Version used by the Senate Version used by the House of Representatives Royal Family Edit Members of the Dutch Royal Family receive their own personalised arms which are based on the Royal Arms For more details see Wapen van Nassau Tak van Otto in Dutch Coats of Arms of the Dutch Royal Family Coat of arms Bearer DetailsFull achievement Escutcheon Queen Maxima Oval shield shaped usually borne by women a quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange over all an escutcheon with the arms of Zorreguieta paternal arms Or two poplar trees proper flanking a Triple towered castle Gules ondoyant to the gate of the castle a river Azure 7 Children ofKing Willem Alexander Princesses Catharina Amalia Alexia and Ariane A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange over all an escutcheon with the arms of Zorreguieta maternal arms 7 Children ofPrincess Beatrix Prince Constantijn A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Amsberg paternal arms Vert a triple towered castle argent on a mount Or 7 Princess Beatrix A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Lippe paternal arms Argent a rose Gules barbed and seeded Or 7 Children of Queen Princess Juliana Princesses Irene Margriet and Christina Oval shield shaped a quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Lippe paternal arms 7 Children ofPrincess Margriet Princes Maurits Bernhard Pieter Christiaan and Floris A quartering of the Dutch royal arms with Orange over all an escutcheon with the arms of the House of Vollenhoven paternal arms Azure a six pointed star Argent impaling Or a deer Gules supported on a tree the tree on a Mount Vert 7 See also EditCoats of arms of provinces of the Netherlands Dutch Republic LionReferences Edit a b Besluit tot het voeren van het Koninklijk wapen 1908 wetten nl The Grand Ducal Family of Luxembourg PDF Service information et presse 2001 p 105 ISBN 2 87999 016 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 03 02 Retrieved 2014 02 26 Dutch Government website Retrieved 9 August 2015 Paspoortwet Overheid nl in Dutch Retrieved 9 August 2015 Image of the Dutch Embassy Residence in Helsinki May 2010 Retrieved 9 August 2015 Staten generaal nl in Dutch Retrieved 9 August 2015 a b c d e f Dutch Royal Household Website Retrieved 9 August 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coats of arms of the Netherlands Rijkswapen en Koninklijk wapen in Dutch Webpage on the High Council of Nobility s official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coat of arms of the Netherlands amp oldid 1118872819, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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