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  1. Guillermo de Orange-Nassau —en neerlandés: Willem van Oranje-Nassau — ( Dillenburg, Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico, 24 de abril de 1533- Delft, Provincias Unidas, 10 de julio de 1584), llamado el Taciturno, fue miembro de la Casa de Nassau y se convirtió en Príncipe de Orange en 1544. Descontento con la falta de poder político de la ...

  2. William the Silent (l. 1533-1584, also known as William of Orange) was the leader of the Dutch Revolt (the Eighty Years' War) in the Netherlands; first politically (between 1559-1568) then militarily (between 1568-1584). He is among the most prominent figures in Dutch history, regarded as the Father of the Fatherland, and in European history of ...

  3. Balthasar Gérard (alternative spellings Gerards or Gerardts; c. 1557 – 14 July 1584) was the assassin of the Dutch revolt 's leader, William the Silent of the House of Orange (William the Silent, and later known as the "Father of the Fatherland"). He killed William the Silent in Delft on 10 July 1584, by shooting him twice with a pair of ...

  4. Austria. Language. English. The Silent Mountain is a 2014 Austrian war drama film written by Clemens Aufderklamm and produced and directed by Ernst Gossner set in the Alpine Front of World War I. The Silent Mountain is a love story set in the Dolomites at the outbreak of hostilities between Italy and Austria-Hungary in 1915.

  5. "William the Silent" is absolutely unambiguous (indeed, there's absolutely no chance that with this article title he might be "confused with the first king") note that this triggers 19000 google hits (that is, excluding "wikipedia" in the search query and putting this entire name in quotes), I don't even need to check whether this is in general about our William the Silent.

  6. William the Silent. (1533–84). The hero of the Dutch struggle against Spanish rule was William the Silent, one of the wealthiest noblemen in Europe. He was born on April 24, 1533, in Dillenburg, Nassau. As count of Nassau he held large estates in the Netherlands, and from a cousin he inherited the French principality of Orange.

  7. SnowFire ( talk) 19:26, 12 October 2014 (UTC) Reply[ reply] William the SilentWilliam I, Prince of Orange – William the Silent is a Nickname and as a matter of fact badly translated nickname, because it should be William the Tacturn see reference to library of congress and Oxford dictionary in sujbect above on this page.