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William I of the Netherlands

William I (Willem Frederik; 24 August 1772 – 12 December 1843) was king of the Netherlands and grand duke of Luxembourg from 1815 until his abdication in 1840.

William I
William in ceremonial robes, by Joseph Paelinck, 1819
King of the Netherlands
Grand Duke of Luxembourg
Reign16 March 1815 – 7 October 1840
Inauguration21 September 1815
PredecessorLouis II as King of Holland[1]
SuccessorWilliam II
Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands
Reign20 November 1813 – 16 March 1815
SuccessorHimself as King
Prince of Orange
Reign9 April – 12 July 1806,
19 October 1813 – 31 May 1815
PredecessorWilliam V, Prince of Orange
SuccessorIncorporated into Nassau
Prince of Nassau-Orange-Fulda
Reign25 February 1803 – 27 October 1806
Duke of Limburg
Reign5 September 1839 – 7 October 1840
PredecessorFrancis I
SuccessorWilliam II
Born(1772-08-24)24 August 1772
Huis ten Bosch, The Hague, Dutch Republic
Died12 December 1843(1843-12-12) (aged 71)
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1791; died 1837)
(m. 1841)
IssueWilliam II of the Netherlands
Prince Frederick
Princess Pauline
Princess Marianne
HouseOrange-Nassau
FatherWilliam V, Prince of Orange
MotherPrincess Wilhelmina of Prussia
ReligionDutch Reformed Church
Signature
Military service
Battles/wars

William was the son of William V, Prince of Orange, the last stadtholder of the Dutch Republic, and Wilhelmina of Prussia. During the Flanders campaign, he commanded the Dutch troops and fought against the French invasion. The family went into exile in London in 1795 following the Batavian Revolution. As compensation for the loss of his father's possessions in the Low Countries, William was appointed ruler of the newly created Principality of Nassau-Orange-Fulda in 1803. When Napoleon invaded Germany in 1806, William fought on the Prussian side and was deposed upon French victory. With the death of his father in 1806, he became Prince of Orange and ruler of the Principality of Orange-Nassau, which he also lost the same year after the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire and subsequent creation of the Confederation of the Rhine. He spent the following years in exile in Prussia. In 1813, following Napoleon's defeat at Leipzig, the Orange-Nassau territories were restored to William; he also accepted the offer to become Sovereign Prince of the United Netherlands.

William proclaimed himself king of the Netherlands in 1815. In the same year, he concluded a treaty with King Frederick William III in which he ceded the Orange-Nassau to Prussia in exchange for becoming the new grand duke of Luxembourg. As king, he adopted a new constitution, presided over strong economic and industrial progress, promoted trade and founded the universities of Leuven, Ghent and Liège. The imposition of the Reformed faith and the Dutch language, as well as feelings of economic inequity, caused widespread resentment in the southern provinces and led to the outbreak of the Belgian Revolution in 1830. William failed to crush the rebellion and in 1839 he accepted the independence of Belgium in accordance with the Treaty of London.

William's disapproval of changes to the constitution, the loss of Belgium and his intention to marry Henrietta d'Oultremont, a Roman Catholic, led to his decision to abdicate in 1840. His eldest son acceded to the throne as King William II. William died in 1843 in Berlin at the age of 71.

Prince of Orange edit

 
Portrait of William (1775)

King William I's parents were the last stadtholder William V, Prince of Orange of the Dutch Republic, and his wife Wilhelmina of Prussia. Until 1806, William was formally known as William VI, Prince of Orange-Nassau,[a] and between 1806 and 1813 also as Prince of Orange. In Berlin on 1 October 1791, William married his maternal first cousin (Frederica Louisa) Wilhelmina of Prussia, born in Potsdam. She was the daughter of King Frederick William II of Prussia. After Wilhelmina died in 1837, William married Countess Henrietta d'Oultremont (28 February 1792, in Maastricht – 26 October 1864, in Schloss Rahe), created countess of Nassau, on 17 February 1841, also in Berlin.

Youth and early military career edit

 
Young William and his brother Frederick in 1790

As eldest son of the William V, Prince of Orange, William was informally referred to as Erfprins[b] (Hereditary Prince) by contemporaries from his birth until the death of his father in 1806 to distinguish him from William V.

Like his younger brother Prince Frederick of Orange-Nassau he was tutored by the Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler and the Dutch historian Herman Tollius. They were both tutored in the military arts by General Frederick Stamford. After the Patriot revolt had been suppressed in 1787, he in 1788–89 attended the military academy in Brunswick which was considered an excellent military school, together with his brother. In 1790 he visited a number of foreign courts like the one in Nassau and the Prussian capital Berlin, where he first met his future wife.[2]: 100 

William subsequently studied briefly at the University of Leiden. In 1790 he was appointed a general of infantry in the Dutch States Army of which his father was Captain general, and he was made a member of the Council of State of the Netherlands. In November 1791 he took his new bride to The Hague.[2]: 101 

After the National Convention of the French Republic had declared war on the Dutch Republic in February 1793, William was appointed commander-in-chief of the veldleger (mobile army) of the States Army (his father remained the nominal head of the armed forces).[2]: 157  As such he commanded the troops that took part in the Flanders Campaign of 1793–95. He took part in the Battles of Veurne and Menin (where his brother was wounded) in 1793, and commanded during the Siege of Landrecies (1794), whose fortress surrendered to him. In May 1794 he had replaced general Kaunitz as commander of the combined Austro-Dutch forces on the instigation of Emperor Francis II who apparently had a high opinion of him.[2]: 270  William was victorious at the Battles of Gosselies and Lambusart and proved to be an able commander, but the French armies ultimately proved too strong, and the general allied leadership too inept. Despite a well-executed attack by William on the French left, the allied army under Coburg was finally defeated at the Battle of Fleurus. The French first entered Dutch Brabant which they dominated after the Battle of Boxtel. When in the winter of 1794–95 the rivers in the Rhine delta froze over, the French breached the southern Hollandic Water Line and the situation became militarily untenable. In many places Dutch revolutionaries took over the local government. After the Batavian Revolution in Amsterdam on 18 January 1795 the stadtholder decided to flee to Britain, and his sons accompanied him. (On this last day in Holland his father relieved William honorably of his commands). The next day the Batavian Republic was proclaimed.[2]: 341–365, 374–404, 412 

Exile edit

Soon after the departure to Britain the hereditary prince went back to the continent, where his brother was assembling former members of the States Army in Osnabrück for a planned invasion into the Batavian Republic in the summer of 1795. However, the neutral Prussian government forbade this.[3]: 231–235 

In 1799, William landed in the current North Holland as part of an Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland. The hereditary prince was instrumental in fomenting a mutiny on the Batavian naval squadron in the Vlieter, resulting in the surrender of the ships without a fight to the Royal Navy, which accepted the surrender in the name of the stadtholder. Not all the local Dutch population, however, was pleased with the arrival of the prince. One local Orangist was even executed.[c] The hoped-for popular uprising failed to materialise. After several minor battles the hereditary prince was forced to leave the country again after the Convention of Alkmaar. The mutineers of the Batavian fleet, with their ships, and a large number of deserters from the Batavian army accompanied the retreating British troops to Britain. There William formed the King's Dutch Brigade with these troops, a military unit in British service, that swore oaths of allegiance to the British king, but also to the States General, defunct since 1795, "whenever those would be reconstituted."[d] This brigade trained on the Isle of Wight in 1800 and was eventually used by the British in Ireland.[4]: 241–265 

When peace was concluded between Great Britain and the French Republic under First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte the Orange exiles were at their nadir. The Dutch Brigade was dissolved on 12 July 1802. Many members of the brigade went home to the Batavian Republic, thanks to an amnesty. The surrendered ships of the Batavian Navy were not returned, due to an agreement between the stadtholder and the British government of 11 March 1800.[4]: 329–330  Instead the stadtholder was allowed to sell them to the Royal Navy for an appreciable sum.[5]

The stadtholder, feeling betrayed by the British, left for Germany. The hereditary prince, having a more flexible mind, went to visit Napoleon at St. Cloud in 1802. He apparently charmed the First Consul, and was charmed by him. Napoleon raised hopes for William that he might have an important role in a reformed Batavian Republic. Meanwhile, William's brother-in-law Frederick William III of Prussia, neutral at the time, promoted a Franco-Prussian convention of 23 May 1802, in addition to the Treaty of Amiens, that gave the House of Orange a few abbatial domains in Germany, that were combined to the Principality of Nassau-Orange-Fulda by way of indemnification for its losses in the Batavian Republic. The stadtholder gave this principality immediately to his son.[3]: 452 

 
William Frederick, Prince of Orange in c. 1805–1810

When war broke out between the French Empire and Prussia in 1806, William supported his Prussian relatives, though he was nominally a French vassal. He received command of a Prussian division which took part in the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt. The Prussians lost that battle and William was forced to surrender his troops rather ignominiously at Erfurt the day after the battle. He was made a prisoner of war, but was paroled soon. Napoleon punished him for his betrayal, however, by taking away his principality. As a parolee, William was not allowed to take part in the hostilities anymore. After the Peace of Tilsit William received a pension from France in compensation.[4]: 454–469, 471, 501 

In the same year, 1806, his father, the Prince of Orange died, and William not only inherited the title, but also his father's claims on the inheritance embodied in the Nassau lands. This would become important a few years later, when developments in Germany coincided to make William the Fürst (Prince) of a diverse assembly of Nassau lands that had belonged to other branches of the House of Nassau.

But before this came about, in 1809 tensions between Austria and France became intense, resulting in the War of the Fifth Coalition. William did not hesitate to join the Austrian army as a Feldmarschalleutnant (major-general) in May 1809[4]: 516  As a member of the staff of the Austrian supreme commander, Archduke Charles he took part in the Battle of Wagram, where he was wounded in the leg.[4]: 520–523 

Tsar Alexander I of Russia played a central role in the restoration of the Netherlands. Prince William VI (as he was now known), who had been living in exile in Prussia, met with Alexander I in March 1813. Alexander promised to support William and help restore an independent Netherlands with William as king. Russian troops in the Netherlands participated with their Prussian allies in restoring the dynasty. Dynastic considerations of marriage between the royal houses of Great Britain and the Netherlands, assured British approval.

Return edit

 
Landing of William in Scheveningen on 30 November 1813
 
Inauguration of William as sovereign Prince of the Netherlands in Amsterdam on 30 March 1814

After Napoleon's defeat at Leipzig (October 1813), the French troops retreated to France from all over Europe. The Netherlands had been annexed to the French Empire by Napoleon in 1810. But now city after city was evacuated by the French occupation troops. In the ensuing power vacuum a number of former Orangist politicians and former Patriots formed a provisional government in November 1813. Although a large number of the members of the provisional government had helped drive out William V 18 years earlier, it was taken for granted that his son would have to head any new government. They also agreed it would be better in the long term for the Dutch to restore him themselves, rather than have the Great Powers impose him on the country. The Dutch population were pleased with the departure of the French, who had ruined the Dutch economy, and this time welcomed the prince.[3]: 634–642 

After having been invited by the Triumvirate of 1813, on 30 November 1813 William disembarked from HMS Warrior and landed at Scheveningen beach, only a few yards from the place where he had left the country with his father 18 years before, and on 6 December the provisional government offered him the title of king. William refused, instead proclaiming himself "Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands". He also wanted the rights of the people to be guaranteed by "a wise constitution".[3]: 643 

The constitution offered William extensive, nearly absolute powers: ministers were only responsible to him, while a unicameral parliament (the States General) exercised only limited power. He was inaugurated as sovereign prince in the New Church in Amsterdam on 30 March 1814. In August 1814, he was appointed Governor-General of the former Austrian Netherlands and the Prince-Bishopric of Liège (more or less modern-day Belgium) by the Allied Powers who occupied that country, ruling them on behalf of Prussia. He was also made Grand Duke of Luxembourg, having received that territory in return for trading his hereditary German lands to Prussia and the Duke of Nassau. The Great Powers had already agreed via the secret Eight Articles of London to unite the Low Countries into a single kingdom, it was believed that this would help keep France in check. With the de facto addition of the Austrian Netherlands and Luxembourg to his realm, William had fulfilled his family's three-century dream of uniting the Low Countries.

King of the Netherlands edit

 
Portrait of William I (1816)

Feeling threatened by Napoleon, who had escaped from Elba, William proclaimed the Netherlands a kingdom on 16 March 1815 at the urging of the powers gathered at the Congress of Vienna. His son, the future king William II, fought as a commander at the Battle of Waterloo. After Napoleon had been sent into exile, William adopted a new constitution which included many features of the old constitution, such as extensive royal powers. He was formally confirmed as hereditary ruler of what was known as the United Kingdom of the Netherlands at the Congress of Vienna.

Principal changes edit

The States General was divided into two chambers. The Eerste Kamer (First Chamber or Senate or House of Lords) was appointed by the king. The Tweede Kamer (Second Chamber or House of Representatives or House of Commons) was elected by the Provincial States, which were in turn chosen by census suffrage. The 110 seats were divided equally between the north and the south, although the population of the north (2 million) was significantly less than that of the south (3.5 million). The States General's primary function was to approve the king's laws and decrees. The constitution contained many present-day Dutch political institutions; however, their functions and composition have changed greatly over the years.

The constitution was accepted in the north, but not in the south. The under-representation of the south was one of the causes of the Belgian Revolution. Referendum turnout was low, in the southern provinces, but William interpreted all abstentions to be yes votes. He prepared a lavish inauguration for himself in Brussels, where he gave the people copper coins (leading to his first nickname, the Copper King).

The spearhead of King William's policies was economic progress. As he founded many trade institutions, his second nickname was the King-Merchant. In 1822, he founded the Algemeene Nederlandsche Maatschappij ter Begunstiging van de Volksvlijt, which would become one of the most important institutions of Belgium after its independence. Industry flourished, especially in the South. In 1817, he also founded three universities in the southern provinces, such as a new University of Leuven, the University of Ghent and the University of Liège. The northern provinces, meanwhile, were the centre of trade. This, in combination with the colonies (Dutch East Indies, Surinam, Curaçao and Dependencies, and the Dutch Gold Coast) created great wealth for the kingdom. However, the money flowed into the hands of Dutch directors. Only a few Belgians managed to profit from the economic growth. Feelings of economic inequity were another cause of the Belgian uprising.

William was also determined to create a unified people, even though the north and the south had drifted far apart culturally and economically since the south was reconquered by Spain after the Act of Abjuration of 1581. The north was commercial, Protestant and entirely Dutch-speaking; the south was industrial, Roman Catholic and divided between Dutch and French-speakers.

Officially, a separation of church and state existed in the kingdom. However, William himself was a strong supporter of the Reformed Church. This led to resentment among the people in the mostly Catholic south. William had also devised controversial language and school policies. Dutch was imposed as the official language in (the Dutch-speaking region of) Flanders; this angered French-speaking aristocrats and industrial workers. Schools throughout the kingdom were required to instruct students in the Reformed faith and the Dutch language. Many in the south feared that the king sought to extinguish Catholicism and the French language.

Revolt of the Southern Provinces edit

 
Portrait of William I (1833)

In August 1830 Daniel Auber's opera La muette de Portici, about the repression of Neapolitans, was staged in Brussels. Performances of this opera seemed to crystallize a sense of nationalism and "Hollandophobia" in Brussels, and spread to the rest of the south. Rioting ensued, chiefly aimed at the kingdom's unpopular justice minister, Cornelis Felix van Maanen, who lived in Brussels. An infuriated William responded by sending troops to repress the riots. However, the riots had spread to other southern cities. The riots quickly became popular uprisings. An independent state of Belgium emerged out of the 1830 Revolution.

The next year, William sent his sons William, the Prince of Orange,[e] and Prince Frederick to invade the new state. Although initially victorious in this Ten Days' Campaign, the Royal Netherlands Army was forced to retreat after the threat of French intervention. Some support for the Orange dynasty (chiefly among the Flemish) persisted for years, but the Dutch never regained control over Belgium. William nevertheless continued the war for eight years. His economic successes became overshadowed by a perceived mismanagement of the war effort. High costs of the war came to burden the Dutch economy, fueling public resentment. In 1839, William was forced to end the war. The United Kingdom of the Netherlands was dissolved by the Treaty of London (1839) and the northern part continued as the Kingdom of the Netherlands. It was not renamed, however, as the "United"-prefix had never been part of its official name, but rather was retrospectively added by historians for descriptive purposes.

Constitutional changes and abdication in later life edit

 
Statue of Willem I of the Netherlands by Pieter Puype (1913) in Apeldoorn

Constitutional changes were initiated in 1840 because the terms which involved the United Kingdom of the Netherlands had to be removed.[clarification needed] These constitutional changes also included the introduction of judicial ministerial responsibility. Although the policies remained uncontrolled by parliament, the prerogative was controllable now. The very conservative William could not live with these constitutional changes. This, the disappointment about the loss of Belgium, and his intention to marry Henrietta d'Oultremont (paradoxically both "Belgian" and Roman Catholic) made him wish to abdicate. He fulfilled this intent on 7 October 1840 and his eldest son acceded to the throne as King William II. William I died in 1843 in Berlin at the age of 71.

Children edit

With his wife Wilhelmina, King William I had six children:

Honours and Arms edit

Honours edit

Coat of arms edit

 
 
Royal coat of arms of King William I Royal monogram

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The family name changed from "Nassau-Dietz" to "Orange-Nassau" when John William Friso, Prince of Orange claimed the inheritance of Prince William III of Orange in 1702.
  2. ^ German: Erbprinz
  3. ^ The freule (baroness) Judith Van Dorth tot Holthuizen; see Schama, p. 397
  4. ^ The States General were the sovereign power in the defunct Dutch Republic; the troops of the States Army had also sworn loyalty to the States General and not the stadtholder.
  5. ^ This had become a courtesy title for the Dutch crown prince under the new kingdom.

References edit

  1. ^ Foissy, M. (1830). La famille Bonaparte depuis 1264 (in French). Paris: Vergne. p. 101.
  2. ^ a b c d e Bas, François de (1887). Prins Frederik Der Nederlanden en Zijn Tijd, vol. 1. H. A. M. Roelants, 1887. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d Schama, Simon (1992). Patriots and Liberators. Revolution in the Netherlands 1780–1813. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-679-72949-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e Bas, François de (1891). Prins Frederik der Nederlanden en zijn tijd, Volume 2. H. A. M. Roelants, 1891. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  5. ^ James, W. M. (2002). The Naval History of Great Britain: During the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Vol. 2 1797–1799 (reprint ed.). Stackpole books. pp. 309–310.
  6. ^ Per Nordenvall (1998). "Kungl. Maj:ts Orden". Kungliga Serafimerorden: 1748–1998 (in Swedish). Stockholm. ISBN 91-630-6744-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ "Caballeros de la insigne orden del toisón de oro", Guía Oficial de España (in Spanish), 1842, p. 73, retrieved 10 December 2019
  8. ^ Shaw, Wm. A. (1906) The Knights of England, I, London, p. 52
  9. ^ Shaw, p. 178
  10. ^ Shaw, p. 182
  11. ^ Liste der Ritter des Königlich Preußischen Hohen Ordens vom Schwarzen Adler (1851), "Von Seiner Majestät dem Könige Friedrich Wilhelm II. ernannte Ritter" p. 12
  12. ^ Bragança, Jose Vicente de (2014). "Agraciamentos Portugueses Aos Príncipes da Casa Saxe-Coburgo-Gota" [Portuguese Honours awarded to Princes of the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha]. Pro Phalaris (in Portuguese). 9–10: 5. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  13. ^ "A Szent István Rend tagjai" 22 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Staatshandbuch für das Großherzogtum Sachsen / Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (1843), "Großherzogliche Hausorden" p. 8
  15. ^ Genealogie ascendante jusqu'au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l'Europe actuellement vivans [Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living] (in French). Bourdeaux: Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel. 1768. pp. 17, 88.

Further reading edit

  • Caraway, David Todd. "Retreat from Liberalism: William I, Freedom of the Press, Political Asylum, and the Foreign Relations of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, 1814–1818" PhD dissertation, U. of Delaware, 2003, 341 pp. Abstract: Dissertation Abstracts International 2003, Vol. 64 Issue 3, p. 1030
  • Kossmann, E. H. The Low Countries 1780–1940 (1978) ch 3–4

External links edit

  • (in Dutch) Willem I, Koning (1772-1843) at the Dutch Royal House website
William I of the Netherlands
Cadet branch of the House of Nassau
Born: 24 August 1772 Died: 12 December 1843
Dutch royalty
Preceded by Prince of Orange
1806–1815
Succeeded by
New creation Count of Nassau
1840–43
Abolished
Regnal titles
New creation
Prince of Nassau-Orange-Fulda
1803–06
Confiscated
Preceded by Prince of Orange-Nassau
1806, 1813–15
Abolished
Incorporated into Nassau
Preceded byas King of Holland Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands
1813–15
Succeeded by
Himself as King
Preceded by
Himself
as Sovereign Prince
King of the Netherlands
1815–40
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
Francis I
as Duke of Luxembourg
Grand Duke of Luxembourg
1815–40
Vacant
Title last held by
Francis I
as Duke of Limburg
Duke of Limburg
1839–40

william, netherlands, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, a. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources William I of the Netherlands news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message William I Willem Frederik 24 August 1772 12 December 1843 was king of the Netherlands and grand duke of Luxembourg from 1815 until his abdication in 1840 William IWilliam in ceremonial robes by Joseph Paelinck 1819King of the NetherlandsGrand Duke of LuxembourgReign16 March 1815 7 October 1840Inauguration21 September 1815PredecessorLouis II as King of Holland 1 SuccessorWilliam IISovereign Prince of the NetherlandsReign20 November 1813 16 March 1815SuccessorHimself as KingPrince of OrangeReign9 April 12 July 1806 19 October 1813 31 May 1815PredecessorWilliam V Prince of OrangeSuccessorIncorporated into NassauPrince of Nassau Orange FuldaReign25 February 1803 27 October 1806Duke of LimburgReign5 September 1839 7 October 1840PredecessorFrancis ISuccessorWilliam IIBorn 1772 08 24 24 August 1772Huis ten Bosch The Hague Dutch RepublicDied12 December 1843 1843 12 12 aged 71 Berlin Kingdom of PrussiaBurialNieuwe Kerk DelftSpouseWilhelmina of Prussia m 1791 died 1837 wbr Henrietta d Oultremont morganatic m 1841 wbr IssueWilliam II of the NetherlandsPrince FrederickPrincess PaulinePrincess MarianneHouseOrange NassauFatherWilliam V Prince of OrangeMotherPrincess Wilhelmina of PrussiaReligionDutch Reformed ChurchSignatureMilitary serviceBattles wars incomplete War of the First Coalition Battle of Veurne Battle of Lincelles Battle of Menin Siege of Maubeuge Siege of Landrecies Battle of Gosselies Battle of Lambusart Battle of Fleurus War of the Fourth Coalition Battle of Jena Auerstedt War of the Fifth Coalition Battle of WagramWilliam was the son of William V Prince of Orange the last stadtholder of the Dutch Republic and Wilhelmina of Prussia During the Flanders campaign he commanded the Dutch troops and fought against the French invasion The family went into exile in London in 1795 following the Batavian Revolution As compensation for the loss of his father s possessions in the Low Countries William was appointed ruler of the newly created Principality of Nassau Orange Fulda in 1803 When Napoleon invaded Germany in 1806 William fought on the Prussian side and was deposed upon French victory With the death of his father in 1806 he became Prince of Orange and ruler of the Principality of Orange Nassau which he also lost the same year after the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire and subsequent creation of the Confederation of the Rhine He spent the following years in exile in Prussia In 1813 following Napoleon s defeat at Leipzig the Orange Nassau territories were restored to William he also accepted the offer to become Sovereign Prince of the United Netherlands William proclaimed himself king of the Netherlands in 1815 In the same year he concluded a treaty with King Frederick William III in which he ceded the Orange Nassau to Prussia in exchange for becoming the new grand duke of Luxembourg As king he adopted a new constitution presided over strong economic and industrial progress promoted trade and founded the universities of Leuven Ghent and Liege The imposition of the Reformed faith and the Dutch language as well as feelings of economic inequity caused widespread resentment in the southern provinces and led to the outbreak of the Belgian Revolution in 1830 William failed to crush the rebellion and in 1839 he accepted the independence of Belgium in accordance with the Treaty of London William s disapproval of changes to the constitution the loss of Belgium and his intention to marry Henrietta d Oultremont a Roman Catholic led to his decision to abdicate in 1840 His eldest son acceded to the throne as King William II William died in 1843 in Berlin at the age of 71 Contents 1 Prince of Orange 1 1 Youth and early military career 1 2 Exile 1 3 Return 2 King of the Netherlands 2 1 Principal changes 2 2 Revolt of the Southern Provinces 2 3 Constitutional changes and abdication in later life 3 Children 4 Honours and Arms 4 1 Honours 4 2 Coat of arms 5 Ancestry 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPrince of Orange edit nbsp Portrait of William 1775 King William I s parents were the last stadtholder William V Prince of Orange of the Dutch Republic and his wife Wilhelmina of Prussia Until 1806 William was formally known as William VI Prince of Orange Nassau a and between 1806 and 1813 also as Prince of Orange In Berlin on 1 October 1791 William married his maternal first cousin Frederica Louisa Wilhelmina of Prussia born in Potsdam She was the daughter of King Frederick William II of Prussia After Wilhelmina died in 1837 William married Countess Henrietta d Oultremont 28 February 1792 in Maastricht 26 October 1864 in Schloss Rahe created countess of Nassau on 17 February 1841 also in Berlin Youth and early military career edit Main article Flanders campaign nbsp Young William and his brother Frederick in 1790As eldest son of the William V Prince of Orange William was informally referred to as Erfprins b Hereditary Prince by contemporaries from his birth until the death of his father in 1806 to distinguish him from William V Like his younger brother Prince Frederick of Orange Nassau he was tutored by the Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler and the Dutch historian Herman Tollius They were both tutored in the military arts by General Frederick Stamford After the Patriot revolt had been suppressed in 1787 he in 1788 89 attended the military academy in Brunswick which was considered an excellent military school together with his brother In 1790 he visited a number of foreign courts like the one in Nassau and the Prussian capital Berlin where he first met his future wife 2 100 William subsequently studied briefly at the University of Leiden In 1790 he was appointed a general of infantry in the Dutch States Army of which his father was Captain general and he was made a member of the Council of State of the Netherlands In November 1791 he took his new bride to The Hague 2 101 After the National Convention of the French Republic had declared war on the Dutch Republic in February 1793 William was appointed commander in chief of the veldleger mobile army of the States Army his father remained the nominal head of the armed forces 2 157 As such he commanded the troops that took part in the Flanders Campaign of 1793 95 He took part in the Battles of Veurne and Menin where his brother was wounded in 1793 and commanded during the Siege of Landrecies 1794 whose fortress surrendered to him In May 1794 he had replaced general Kaunitz as commander of the combined Austro Dutch forces on the instigation of Emperor Francis II who apparently had a high opinion of him 2 270 William was victorious at the Battles of Gosselies and Lambusart and proved to be an able commander but the French armies ultimately proved too strong and the general allied leadership too inept Despite a well executed attack by William on the French left the allied army under Coburg was finally defeated at the Battle of Fleurus The French first entered Dutch Brabant which they dominated after the Battle of Boxtel When in the winter of 1794 95 the rivers in the Rhine delta froze over the French breached the southern Hollandic Water Line and the situation became militarily untenable In many places Dutch revolutionaries took over the local government After the Batavian Revolution in Amsterdam on 18 January 1795 the stadtholder decided to flee to Britain and his sons accompanied him On this last day in Holland his father relieved William honorably of his commands The next day the Batavian Republic was proclaimed 2 341 365 374 404 412 Exile edit Soon after the departure to Britain the hereditary prince went back to the continent where his brother was assembling former members of the States Army in Osnabruck for a planned invasion into the Batavian Republic in the summer of 1795 However the neutral Prussian government forbade this 3 231 235 In 1799 William landed in the current North Holland as part of an Anglo Russian invasion of Holland The hereditary prince was instrumental in fomenting a mutiny on the Batavian naval squadron in the Vlieter resulting in the surrender of the ships without a fight to the Royal Navy which accepted the surrender in the name of the stadtholder Not all the local Dutch population however was pleased with the arrival of the prince One local Orangist was even executed c The hoped for popular uprising failed to materialise After several minor battles the hereditary prince was forced to leave the country again after the Convention of Alkmaar The mutineers of the Batavian fleet with their ships and a large number of deserters from the Batavian army accompanied the retreating British troops to Britain There William formed the King s Dutch Brigade with these troops a military unit in British service that swore oaths of allegiance to the British king but also to the States General defunct since 1795 whenever those would be reconstituted d This brigade trained on the Isle of Wight in 1800 and was eventually used by the British in Ireland 4 241 265 When peace was concluded between Great Britain and the French Republic under First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte the Orange exiles were at their nadir The Dutch Brigade was dissolved on 12 July 1802 Many members of the brigade went home to the Batavian Republic thanks to an amnesty The surrendered ships of the Batavian Navy were not returned due to an agreement between the stadtholder and the British government of 11 March 1800 4 329 330 Instead the stadtholder was allowed to sell them to the Royal Navy for an appreciable sum 5 The stadtholder feeling betrayed by the British left for Germany The hereditary prince having a more flexible mind went to visit Napoleon at St Cloud in 1802 He apparently charmed the First Consul and was charmed by him Napoleon raised hopes for William that he might have an important role in a reformed Batavian Republic Meanwhile William s brother in law Frederick William III of Prussia neutral at the time promoted a Franco Prussian convention of 23 May 1802 in addition to the Treaty of Amiens that gave the House of Orange a few abbatial domains in Germany that were combined to the Principality of Nassau Orange Fulda by way of indemnification for its losses in the Batavian Republic The stadtholder gave this principality immediately to his son 3 452 nbsp William Frederick Prince of Orange in c 1805 1810When war broke out between the French Empire and Prussia in 1806 William supported his Prussian relatives though he was nominally a French vassal He received command of a Prussian division which took part in the Battle of Jena Auerstedt The Prussians lost that battle and William was forced to surrender his troops rather ignominiously at Erfurt the day after the battle He was made a prisoner of war but was paroled soon Napoleon punished him for his betrayal however by taking away his principality As a parolee William was not allowed to take part in the hostilities anymore After the Peace of Tilsit William received a pension from France in compensation 4 454 469 471 501 In the same year 1806 his father the Prince of Orange died and William not only inherited the title but also his father s claims on the inheritance embodied in the Nassau lands This would become important a few years later when developments in Germany coincided to make William the Furst Prince of a diverse assembly of Nassau lands that had belonged to other branches of the House of Nassau But before this came about in 1809 tensions between Austria and France became intense resulting in the War of the Fifth Coalition William did not hesitate to join the Austrian army as a Feldmarschalleutnant major general in May 1809 4 516 As a member of the staff of the Austrian supreme commander Archduke Charles he took part in the Battle of Wagram where he was wounded in the leg 4 520 523 Tsar Alexander I of Russia played a central role in the restoration of the Netherlands Prince William VI as he was now known who had been living in exile in Prussia met with Alexander I in March 1813 Alexander promised to support William and help restore an independent Netherlands with William as king Russian troops in the Netherlands participated with their Prussian allies in restoring the dynasty Dynastic considerations of marriage between the royal houses of Great Britain and the Netherlands assured British approval Return edit See also Sovereign Principality of the United Netherlands nbsp Landing of William in Scheveningen on 30 November 1813 nbsp Inauguration of William as sovereign Prince of the Netherlands in Amsterdam on 30 March 1814After Napoleon s defeat at Leipzig October 1813 the French troops retreated to France from all over Europe The Netherlands had been annexed to the French Empire by Napoleon in 1810 But now city after city was evacuated by the French occupation troops In the ensuing power vacuum a number of former Orangist politicians and former Patriots formed a provisional government in November 1813 Although a large number of the members of the provisional government had helped drive out William V 18 years earlier it was taken for granted that his son would have to head any new government They also agreed it would be better in the long term for the Dutch to restore him themselves rather than have the Great Powers impose him on the country The Dutch population were pleased with the departure of the French who had ruined the Dutch economy and this time welcomed the prince 3 634 642 After having been invited by the Triumvirate of 1813 on 30 November 1813 William disembarked from HMS Warrior and landed at Scheveningen beach only a few yards from the place where he had left the country with his father 18 years before and on 6 December the provisional government offered him the title of king William refused instead proclaiming himself Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands He also wanted the rights of the people to be guaranteed by a wise constitution 3 643 The constitution offered William extensive nearly absolute powers ministers were only responsible to him while a unicameral parliament the States General exercised only limited power He was inaugurated as sovereign prince in the New Church in Amsterdam on 30 March 1814 In August 1814 he was appointed Governor General of the former Austrian Netherlands and the Prince Bishopric of Liege more or less modern day Belgium by the Allied Powers who occupied that country ruling them on behalf of Prussia He was also made Grand Duke of Luxembourg having received that territory in return for trading his hereditary German lands to Prussia and the Duke of Nassau The Great Powers had already agreed via the secret Eight Articles of London to unite the Low Countries into a single kingdom it was believed that this would help keep France in check With the de facto addition of the Austrian Netherlands and Luxembourg to his realm William had fulfilled his family s three century dream of uniting the Low Countries King of the Netherlands edit nbsp Portrait of William I 1816 Feeling threatened by Napoleon who had escaped from Elba William proclaimed the Netherlands a kingdom on 16 March 1815 at the urging of the powers gathered at the Congress of Vienna His son the future king William II fought as a commander at the Battle of Waterloo After Napoleon had been sent into exile William adopted a new constitution which included many features of the old constitution such as extensive royal powers He was formally confirmed as hereditary ruler of what was known as the United Kingdom of the Netherlands at the Congress of Vienna Principal changes edit The States General was divided into two chambers The Eerste Kamer First Chamber or Senate or House of Lords was appointed by the king The Tweede Kamer Second Chamber or House of Representatives or House of Commons was elected by the Provincial States which were in turn chosen by census suffrage The 110 seats were divided equally between the north and the south although the population of the north 2 million was significantly less than that of the south 3 5 million The States General s primary function was to approve the king s laws and decrees The constitution contained many present day Dutch political institutions however their functions and composition have changed greatly over the years The constitution was accepted in the north but not in the south The under representation of the south was one of the causes of the Belgian Revolution Referendum turnout was low in the southern provinces but William interpreted all abstentions to be yes votes He prepared a lavish inauguration for himself in Brussels where he gave the people copper coins leading to his first nickname the Copper King The spearhead of King William s policies was economic progress As he founded many trade institutions his second nickname was the King Merchant In 1822 he founded the Algemeene Nederlandsche Maatschappij ter Begunstiging van de Volksvlijt which would become one of the most important institutions of Belgium after its independence Industry flourished especially in the South In 1817 he also founded three universities in the southern provinces such as a new University of Leuven the University of Ghent and the University of Liege The northern provinces meanwhile were the centre of trade This in combination with the colonies Dutch East Indies Surinam Curacao and Dependencies and the Dutch Gold Coast created great wealth for the kingdom However the money flowed into the hands of Dutch directors Only a few Belgians managed to profit from the economic growth Feelings of economic inequity were another cause of the Belgian uprising William was also determined to create a unified people even though the north and the south had drifted far apart culturally and economically since the south was reconquered by Spain after the Act of Abjuration of 1581 The north was commercial Protestant and entirely Dutch speaking the south was industrial Roman Catholic and divided between Dutch and French speakers Officially a separation of church and state existed in the kingdom However William himself was a strong supporter of the Reformed Church This led to resentment among the people in the mostly Catholic south William had also devised controversial language and school policies Dutch was imposed as the official language in the Dutch speaking region of Flanders this angered French speaking aristocrats and industrial workers Schools throughout the kingdom were required to instruct students in the Reformed faith and the Dutch language Many in the south feared that the king sought to extinguish Catholicism and the French language Revolt of the Southern Provinces edit Main article Belgian Revolution nbsp Portrait of William I 1833 In August 1830 Daniel Auber s opera La muette de Portici about the repression of Neapolitans was staged in Brussels Performances of this opera seemed to crystallize a sense of nationalism and Hollandophobia in Brussels and spread to the rest of the south Rioting ensued chiefly aimed at the kingdom s unpopular justice minister Cornelis Felix van Maanen who lived in Brussels An infuriated William responded by sending troops to repress the riots However the riots had spread to other southern cities The riots quickly became popular uprisings An independent state of Belgium emerged out of the 1830 Revolution The next year William sent his sons William the Prince of Orange e and Prince Frederick to invade the new state Although initially victorious in this Ten Days Campaign the Royal Netherlands Army was forced to retreat after the threat of French intervention Some support for the Orange dynasty chiefly among the Flemish persisted for years but the Dutch never regained control over Belgium William nevertheless continued the war for eight years His economic successes became overshadowed by a perceived mismanagement of the war effort High costs of the war came to burden the Dutch economy fueling public resentment In 1839 William was forced to end the war The United Kingdom of the Netherlands was dissolved by the Treaty of London 1839 and the northern part continued as the Kingdom of the Netherlands It was not renamed however as the United prefix had never been part of its official name but rather was retrospectively added by historians for descriptive purposes Constitutional changes and abdication in later life edit nbsp Statue of Willem I of the Netherlands by Pieter Puype 1913 in ApeldoornConstitutional changes were initiated in 1840 because the terms which involved the United Kingdom of the Netherlands had to be removed clarification needed These constitutional changes also included the introduction of judicial ministerial responsibility Although the policies remained uncontrolled by parliament the prerogative was controllable now The very conservative William could not live with these constitutional changes This the disappointment about the loss of Belgium and his intention to marry Henrietta d Oultremont paradoxically both Belgian and Roman Catholic made him wish to abdicate He fulfilled this intent on 7 October 1840 and his eldest son acceded to the throne as King William II William I died in 1843 in Berlin at the age of 71 Children editWith his wife Wilhelmina King William I had six children Willem Frederik George Lodewijk b The Hague 6 December 1792 d Tilburg 17 March 1849 later King William II of the Netherlands from 1840 Married Grand Duchess Anna Pavlovna of Russia Stillborn son Hampton Court Palace Middlesex 18 August 1795 Willem Frederik Karel b Berlin 28 February 1797 d Wassenaar 8 September 1881 married on 21 May 1825 his first cousin Louise daughter of Frederick William III of Prussia Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Pauline Charlotte b Berlin 1 March 1800 d Freienwalde 22 December 1806 Stillborn son Berlin 30 August 1806 Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Charlotte Marianne b Berlin 9 May 1810 d Schloss Reinhartshausen bei Erbach 29 May 1883 married on 14 September 1830 with Prince Albert of Prussia They divorced in 1849 Honours and Arms editHonours edit nbsp Netherlands Founder and Grand Master of the Military Order of William 30 April 1815 Founder and Grand Master of the Order of the Netherlands Lion 29 September 1815 nbsp Sweden Knight of the Order of the Seraphim 14 April 1813 6 nbsp Spain 876th Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece 5 July 1814 7 nbsp United Kingdom 648th Knight of the Order of the Garter 10 August 1814 8 Honorary Knight of the Order of the Bath 16 August 1814 9 Grand Cross military 2 January 1815 10 nbsp Prussia Knight of the Order of the Black Eagle 8 February 1787 11 nbsp Portugal Grand Cross of the Sash of the Three Orders October 1825 12 nbsp Austria Grand Cross of the Order of St Stephen 1837 13 nbsp Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the Order of the White Falcon 20 November 1839 14 Coat of arms edit nbsp nbsp Royal coat of arms of King William I Royal monogramAncestry editSee also Dutch monarchs family tree Ancestors of William I of the Netherlands 15 8 John William Friso Prince of Orange4 William IV Prince of Orange9 Princess Marie Louise of Hesse Kassel2 William V Prince of Orange10 George II of Great Britain5 Anne Princess Royal11 Princess Caroline of Brandenburg Ansbach1 William I of the Netherlands12 Frederick William I of Prussia6 Prince Augustus William of Prussia13 Princess Sophia Dorothea of Hanover3 Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia14 Ferdinand Albert II Duke of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel7 Duchess Luise of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel15 Duchess Antoinette of Brunswick WolfenbuttelNotes edit The family name changed from Nassau Dietz to Orange Nassau when John William Friso Prince of Orange claimed the inheritance of Prince William III of Orange in 1702 German Erbprinz The freule baroness Judith Van Dorth tot Holthuizen see Schama p 397 The States General were the sovereign power in the defunct Dutch Republic the troops of the States Army had also sworn loyalty to the States General and not the stadtholder This had become a courtesy title for the Dutch crown prince under the new kingdom References edit Foissy M 1830 La famille Bonaparte depuis 1264 in French Paris Vergne p 101 a b c d e Bas Francois de 1887 Prins Frederik Der Nederlanden en Zijn Tijd vol 1 H A M Roelants 1887 Retrieved 31 March 2013 a b c d Schama Simon 1992 Patriots and Liberators Revolution in the Netherlands 1780 1813 New York Vintage Books ISBN 0 679 72949 6 a b c d e Bas Francois de 1891 Prins Frederik der Nederlanden en zijn tijd Volume 2 H A M Roelants 1891 Retrieved 31 March 2013 James W M 2002 The Naval History of Great Britain During the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars Vol 2 1797 1799 reprint ed Stackpole books pp 309 310 Per Nordenvall 1998 Kungl Maj ts Orden Kungliga Serafimerorden 1748 1998 in Swedish Stockholm ISBN 91 630 6744 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Caballeros de la insigne orden del toison de oro Guia Oficial de Espana in Spanish 1842 p 73 retrieved 10 December 2019 Shaw Wm A 1906 The Knights of England I London p 52 Shaw p 178 Shaw p 182 Liste der Ritter des Koniglich Preussischen Hohen Ordens vom Schwarzen Adler 1851 Von Seiner Majestat dem Konige Friedrich Wilhelm II ernannte Ritter p 12 Braganca Jose Vicente de 2014 Agraciamentos Portugueses Aos Principes da Casa Saxe Coburgo Gota Portuguese Honours awarded to Princes of the House of Saxe Coburg and Gotha Pro Phalaris in Portuguese 9 10 5 Retrieved 28 November 2019 A Szent Istvan Rend tagjai Archived 22 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Staatshandbuch fur das Grossherzogtum Sachsen Sachsen Weimar Eisenach 1843 Grossherzogliche Hausorden p 8 Genealogie ascendante jusqu au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l Europe actuellement vivans Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living in French Bourdeaux Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel 1768 pp 17 88 Further reading editCaraway David Todd Retreat from Liberalism William I Freedom of the Press Political Asylum and the Foreign Relations of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands 1814 1818 PhD dissertation U of Delaware 2003 341 pp Abstract Dissertation Abstracts International 2003 Vol 64 Issue 3 p 1030 Kossmann E H The Low Countries 1780 1940 1978 ch 3 4External links edit William I King of the Netherlands Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed 1911 pp 669 670 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William I of the Netherlands in Dutch Willem I Koning 1772 1843 at the Dutch Royal House websiteWilliam I of the NetherlandsHouse of Orange NassauCadet branch of the House of NassauBorn 24 August 1772 Died 12 December 1843Dutch royaltyPreceded byWilliam V Prince of Orange1806 1815 Succeeded byWilliam IINew creation Count of Nassau1840 43 AbolishedRegnal titlesNew creationdue to German mediatization Prince of Nassau Orange Fulda1803 06 Confiscateddue to creation Confederation of the RhinePreceded byWilliam V Prince of Orange Nassau1806 1813 15 AbolishedIncorporated into NassauPreceded byLouis IIas King of Holland Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands1813 15 Succeeded byHimself as KingPreceded byHimselfas Sovereign Prince King of the Netherlands1815 40 Succeeded byWilliam IIVacantTitle last held byFrancis Ias Duke of Luxembourg Grand Duke of Luxembourg1815 40VacantTitle last held byFrancis Ias Duke of Limburg Duke of Limburg1839 40 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William I of the Netherlands amp oldid 1206735701, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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