Willem II: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>David E. Volk m (subpages, categories moved to metadata page) |
imported>Meg Taylor (update template, move content to subgroups) |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
He was born at The Hague on Dec. 6, 1792. Educated in exile, he returned in 1813 with his father, [[William I (Netherlands)|William I]], who had become king of the United Netherlands in 1813. Popular in the southern Netherlands (Belgium), William II might have been able to prevent the separation of [[Belgium, history|Belgium]] from the United Netherlands if his father had not interfered. Crowned king after his father's abdication in 1840, William II faced internal political problems which resulted in 1848 in a liberal constitution, greatly curtailing the power of the crown. He died on Mar. 17, 1849 | He was born at The Hague on Dec. 6, 1792. Educated in exile, he returned in 1813 with his father, [[William I (Netherlands)|William I]], who had become king of the United Netherlands in 1813. Popular in the southern Netherlands (Belgium), William II might have been able to prevent the separation of [[Belgium, history|Belgium]] from the United Netherlands if his father had not interfered. Crowned king after his father's abdication in 1840, William II faced internal political problems which resulted in 1848 in a liberal constitution, greatly curtailing the power of the crown. He died on Mar. 17, 1849 | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* [[Netherlands, history]] | * [[Netherlands, history]] | ||
* [[Belgium, history]] | * [[Belgium, history]] | ||
====notes==== | ====notes==== | ||
{{reflist}} |
Revision as of 17:31, 14 September 2013
William II (1792-1849) , King of the Netherlands (1840-49).
He was born at The Hague on Dec. 6, 1792. Educated in exile, he returned in 1813 with his father, William I, who had become king of the United Netherlands in 1813. Popular in the southern Netherlands (Belgium), William II might have been able to prevent the separation of Belgium from the United Netherlands if his father had not interfered. Crowned king after his father's abdication in 1840, William II faced internal political problems which resulted in 1848 in a liberal constitution, greatly curtailing the power of the crown. He died on Mar. 17, 1849