William V (Willem Batavus; 8 March 1748 – 9 April 1806) was Prince of Orange and the last Stadtholder of the Dutch Republic. He went into exile to London in 1795.

Early life

thumb|In The Orangerie (1796), [[James Gillray caricatured William's dalliances during his exile, depicting him as an indolent Cupid sleeping on bags of money, surrounded by pregnant amours]]

thumb|Jacques Firmin Beauvarlet, Portrait of Willem V, Prince of Orange, 1765, engraving

William Batavus was born in The Hague on 8 March 1748, the only son of William IV, who had the year before been restored as stadtholder of the United Provinces. He was only three years old when his father died in 1751, and a long regency began. His regents were:

  • Dowager Princess Anne, his mother, from 1751 to her death in 1759;
  • Dowager Princess Marie Louise, his grandmother, from 1759 to her death in 1765;
  • Duke Louis Ernest of Brunswick-Lüneburg, from 1759 to 1766, and kept on as a privy counsellor, in accordance with the Acte van Consulentschap, until October 1784;
  • Princess Carolina, his sister (who at the time was an adult aged 22, while he was still a minor at 17), from 1765 to William's majority in 1766.

William was made the 568th Knight of the Order of the Garter in 1752.

Stadtholder

William V assumed the position of stadtholder and Captain-General of the Dutch States Army on his majority in 1766. However, he allowed the Duke of Brunswick to retain a large influence on the government with the secret Acte van Consulentschap. On 4 October 1767 in Berlin, Prince William married Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia, the daughter of Augustus William of Prussia, niece of Frederick the Great and a cousin of George III. (He himself was George III's first cousin).

Directly after his arrival in England, the Prince wrote a number of letters (known as the Kew Letters) from his new residence in Kew to the governors of the Dutch colonies, instructing them to hand over their colonies to the British as long as France continued to occupy the "mother country". Only a number complied, while those that demurred from doing so became confused and demoralised. Almost all Dutch colonies were eventually captured by the British, who in the end returned most, but not all (South Africa and Ceylon), first at the Treaty of Amiens and later with the Convention of London signed in 1814. But that was his only success, as the troops suffered from choleric diseases, and civilians at that time were unwilling to re-instate the old regime. The arrogance of the tone in his proclamation, demanding the restoration of the stadtholderate, may not have been helpful, according to Simon Schama.

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|1= 1. William V, Prince of Orange

|2= 2. William IV, Prince of Orange

|3= 3. Anne, Princess Royal and Princess of Orange

|4= 4. John William Friso, Prince of Orange

|5= 5. Marie Louise of Hesse-Kassel

|6= 6. George II of Great Britain

|7= 7. Caroline of Ansbach

|8= 8. Henry Casimir II, Count of Nassau-Dietz

|9= 9. Henriëtte Amalia van Anhalt-Dessau

|10= 10. Charles I, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel

|11= 11. Maria Amalia of Courland

|12= 12. George I of Great Britain

|13= 13. Sophia Dorothea of Celle

|14= 14. John Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach

|15= 15. Princess Eleonore Erdmuthe of Saxe-Eisenach

Appreciation

During his life and afterward, William V was a controversial person, in himself, and because he was the unwilling center of a political firestorm that others had caused. Many historians and contemporaries have written short appreciations of him that were often acerbic. Phillip Charles, Count of Alvensleben, who was the Prussian envoy to the Hague from 1787 (so not someone who must be suspected to be prejudiced against William) may be taken as an example. He wrote:

His great-great-granddaughter Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands was less kind. She simply called him a sufferd (dummy).

Legacy

  • Orange County, North Carolina was named for William V of Orange
  • Orange County, Indiana was named after the North Carolina county.
  • The Orange River, the longest river in South Africa was named in honour of William V of Orange.

See also

  • House of Orange-Nassau

References

Further reading

  • Schulte Nordholt, Jan Willem. The Dutch Republic and American Independence, trans. Herbert H. Rowen. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press 1982

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