Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Father. William I of the Netherlands. Mother. Wilhelmine of Prussia. Princess Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Pauline Charlotte of Orange-Nassau (1 March 1800 – 22 December 1806) was the third child and elder daughter of King William I of the Netherlands and his queen consort, Wilhelmine of Prussia .

  2. La princesa Paulina de Orange-Nassau (1 de marzo de 1800 - 22 de diciembre de 1806) fue una princesa de la casa de Orange-Nassau . Vida. Paulina nació en Berlín, donde sus padres se encontraban exiliados durante la ocupación francesa de los Países Bajos.

    • Guillermina Federica Luisa Paulina Carlota
  3. 29 de jun. de 2020 · Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau was born on 1 March 1800 as the third child and eldest daughter of Wilhelmina of Prussia and the future King William I of the Netherlands, known as the Prince of Orange at the time. She was born in Berlin, where the family was living in exile after the French First Republic had declared war on the stadtholder ...

    • Youth
    • Marriage
    • World War I
    • Interwar Period
    • World War II
    • Later Years
    • In Popular Culture
    • Titles, Styles and Honours
    • Ancestry
    • Sources

    Wilhelmina Helena Pauline Maria of the Netherlands of Orange-Nassau was born on 31 August 1880, in Noordeinde Palace, The Hague, Netherlands. She was the only child of King William III and Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont. Her childhood was characterised by a close relationship with her parents, especially with her father, who was 63 years old when she ...

    On 7 February 1901 in The Hague, Queen Wilhelmina married Duke Henry of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Although she was devoted to her spouse at the time of their wedding, it proved in the long run to be an unhappy marriage that did little more than meet its obligation by producing an heir. Prince Henry was known to have had numerous extra-marital affairs, ...

    Before the First World War began, Wilhelmina visited the powerful German Emperor Wilhelm II. The emperor thought he could impress the ruler of a relatively small country by telling her, "My guards are seven feet tall and yours are only shoulder-high to them." The queen smiled politely and replied, "Quite true, Your Majesty, your guards are seven fe...

    Wilhelmina had a keen understanding of business matters. She used her personal wealth inherited from her family to make several investments in the United States, which eventually made her the world's richest woman and first female billionaire in dollars. During the 1920s and 1930s, the Netherlands began to emerge as an industrial power with the hel...

    On 10 May 1940, Germany invaded the Netherlands. Despite her hostility towards the British, the almost sixty-year-old Queen Wilhelmina and her family fled The Hague and boarded HMS Hereward, a British destroyer sent by King George VI to take them across the North Sea. There is an ongoing debate about the royal family's departure. Some[who?] say tha...

    Following the end of World War II, Queen Wilhelmina made the decision not to return to her palace but to move into a mansion in The Hague, where she lived for eight months. She travelled through the countryside to motivate people, sometimes using a bicycle instead of a car. However, in 1947, while the country was still recovering, the nationalist r...

    Queen Wilhelmina appears as the leader in Sid Meier's Civilization VI and as leader of the Netherlands in Hearts of Iron IVif the Monarchist path is chosen.
    She was portrayed by Andrea Domburg in Paul Verhoeven's 1977 film Soldier of Orange.

    Titles and styles

    1. 31 August 1880 – 21 June 1884: Her Royal HighnessPrincess Pauline of Orange-Nassau 2. 21 June 1884 – 23 November 1890: Her Royal HighnessPrincess Wilhelmina of Orange-Nassau 3. 23 November 1890 – 4 September 1948: Her MajestyQueen Wilhelmina, Queen of the Netherlands, Princess of Orange-Nassau 4. 4 September 1948 – 28 November 1962: Her Royal HighnessPrincess Wilhelmina of the Netherlands Wilhelmina's full regnal title from her accession to her marriage was: "Wilhelmina, by the Grace of Go...

    Honours

    1. Netherlands: 1.1. Grand Master of the Military William Order, 1890; Grand Cross, 4 September 1948 1.2. Grand Master of the Order of the Netherlands Lion, 1890 1.3. Grand Master of the Order of Orange-Nassau, 1890 1.4. Joint Grand Master of the Order of the Gold Lion of Nassau, 1890 1.5. Grand Master of the Order of the House of Orange, 1890 1.6. Founder of the Johanniter Order, 1909 Since Wilhelmina received no Dutch honours before ascending the throne aged ten and resigned the position of...

    Eponyms

    1. Queen Wilhelmina State Park in Arkansas, and Wilhelmina Bayin Antarctica are named for Queen Wilhelmina. 2. In 1892, the company Fortuin celebrated its 50th anniversary by producing peppermint candy with the image of the 12-year-old Princess Wilhelmina, which have continued in production since then.Among Dutch sweets, these mints have become the "most Dutch of all".

    After Wilhelmina had taken office in 1890, rumours were spread by Socialist satirical magazine De Roode Duivel ("The Red Devil") that William III was not her real father, but Emma's confidant, Sebastiaan Mattheus Sigismund de Ranitz (1846-1916)[nl]. This would undermine the legitimacy of the Queen's reign. Although no hard evidence exists for the a...

    Hubbard, Robert H. (1977). Rideau Hall: An Illustrated History of Government House, Ottawa, from Victorian Times to the Present Day. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-0310-6
    Wilhelmina. (1959). Eenzaam maar niet alleen. Amsterdam: Ten Have Uitgevers Kok. ISBN 978-90-259-5146-7. Full text (pdf, 8 MB) online.
  4. Activities. Portrait images of the Princess of Orange. Catharina-Amalia Beatrix Carmen Victoria, Princess of Orange, Princess of the Netherlands, Princess of Orange-Nassau, is first in line to the throne. She was born in The Hague on 7 December 2003, and is the eldest child of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima.

    • Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau1
    • Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau2
    • Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau3
    • Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau4
  5. Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau (1800–1806), princess of the House of Orange-Nassau. Princess Pauline of Württemberg (1810–1856), member of the House of Württemberg and a Princess of Württemberg by birth. Princess Pauline von Metternich (1836–1921), Viennese and Parisian socialite.

  6. 2 de feb. de 2015 · Pauline of Orange-Nassau Monday, 29 June 2020, 6:00 Moniek Bloks 0 Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau was born on 1 March 1800 as the third child and eldest daughter of Wilhelmina of Prussia and the future King William I of the Netherlands, known as the Prince of Orange at the time.