Revision as of 11:50, 7 September 2003 editBemoeial (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users1,982 edits +nl← Previous edit | Revision as of 14:17, 4 October 2003 edit undoRmhermen (talk | contribs)Administrators62,561 editsNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
] | ] | ||
'''William of Orange''' is the name of several historical people |
'''William of Orange''' is the name of several historical people. They are also sometimes known under the ] version of the name, ''Willem''. | ||
There are five ]s in the ] and three kings in the subsequent Kingdom of the ]. | There are five ]s in the ] and three kings in the subsequent Kingdom of the ]. | ||
* ] is more commonly known as William the Silent. | * ] is more commonly known as William the Silent. | ||
* ]. | * ]. | ||
* ] is better known as King William III of England, because he became king of ] in ]. | * ] is better known as King William III of England, because he became king of ] in ]. | ||
The House of Orange died out in the direct line, but a sideline (the Stadtholders of ]), inherited the title. | The House of Orange died out in the direct line, but a sideline (the Stadtholders of ]), inherited the title. | ||
* ]. | * ]. | ||
* ] had to flee the Netherlands in ]. | * ] had to flee the Netherlands in ]. | ||
After the French Revolution the son of Willem V returned to the Netherlands and became: | After the French Revolution the son of Willem V returned to the Netherlands and became: | ||
* King ]. | * King ]. | ||
* His son was King ]. | * His son was King ]. | ||
* And grandson King ]. | * And grandson King ]. |
Revision as of 14:17, 4 October 2003
William of Orange is the name of several historical people. They are also sometimes known under the Dutch version of the name, Willem.
There are five Stadtholders in the Dutch Republic and three kings in the subsequent Kingdom of the Netherlands.
- William I of Orange is more commonly known as William the Silent.
- William II of Orange.
- William III of Orange is better known as King William III of England, because he became king of England in 1688.
The House of Orange died out in the direct line, but a sideline (the Stadtholders of Friesland), inherited the title.
- William IV of Orange.
- William V of Orange had to flee the Netherlands in 1795.
After the French Revolution the son of Willem V returned to the Netherlands and became:
- King William I of the Netherlands.
- His son was King William II of the Netherlands.
- And grandson King William III of the Netherlands.