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WILLIAM III

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 670 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM III  . (1817-189o), king of the
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Netherlands, son of William II., was born at Brussels on the 19th of
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February 1817 . He married in 1839 Sophia, daughter of William I., king of
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Wurttemberg . Sophia was an accomplished woman of high intelligence, but unfortunately the relations between the royal pair were far from cordial and finally ended in
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complete disagreement, and the breach between them continued until the
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death of the queen in 1877 . The private
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life of the king in fact gave rise to much
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scandal; nevertheless he was an excellent constitutional monarch, and, though he never sought to win popular favour, succeeded in winning and retaining in a remark-able degree his
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people's affectionate
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loyalty . He had no sympathy with
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political liberalism, but throughout his long reign of
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forty-two years, with a constant interchange of ministries and many ministerial crises, he never had a serious conflict with the states-general, and his ministers could always count upon his
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fair-mindedness and an earnest
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desire to help them to further the
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national welfare . He was economical, and gave up a third of his
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civil list in order to help forward the task of establishing an equilibrium in the
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annual budget, and he was always ready from his large private fortune to help forward all schemes for the social or
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industrial progress of the country . It was largely due to his prudent diplomacy that Holland passed pacifically through the difficult period of the Luxemburg settlement in x866 and the Franco-German War of 1870 . William III. had two sons by his
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marriage with Sophia of Wurttemberg, William (1841-1879), and Alexander (1843-1884) . Both of them died unmarried . The decease of Prince Alexander
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left the house of Orange without a
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direct heir male, but the prospect of a disputed succession had fortunately been averted by the marriage of the king in 1879 with the princess Emma of Waldeck-Pyrmont . From this union a daughter, Wilhelmina, was born in 1880 .

On her

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father's death at the Loo, on the 23rd of November 189o, she succeeded as queen of the Nether-lands under the regency of her
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mother . William was
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grand duke of Luxemburg by a
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personal title, and his death severed the dynastic relation between the
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kingdom of the Netherlands and the grand duchy . The
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sovereignty of the Luxemburg duchy passed to the next heir male of the house of
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Nassau, Adolphus, ex-duke of Nassau . See J . A . Bruijne, Geschiedenis
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van Nederland in onzen tijd . (5 vols.,
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Schiedam, 1889–1906); P . Blok, Geschiedenis der Nederlandsche Volk (
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Leiden, 1908), vol. viii.; and G . L . Keppers, De regeering van Koning Willem III . (
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Groningen, 1887) . (G .

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