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over
William III's inheritance came to end in 1732. According to the agreement, William IV was awarded the marquisate, but the States promptly reacted and voted "by virtue of their sovereignty and indisputable power to relieve these cities of their vassalage forever." William was outraged and refused
187:
refused to recognise John
William Friso as Marquis of Veere and Flushing, on the grounds of his minority. In reality, they were eager to prevent anyone from ever again seizing all the power and influence that the title carried. In 1703, a group of Zeelanders took the advantage of the internal unrest
253:
and threaten them with seizing
Zeeland's merchants if they refused to acknowledge him as Marquis of Veere and Flushing. William, however, did not tell his father-in-law and the British ministers that the marquisate had been abolished decades ago. Angered and embarrassed, they refused to meddle with
238:, but did not comply. William argued that, if the marquisate was not his property, he did not understand why he was offered money for it; if it was his property, he asserted that it was not for sale. The government claimed that the marquisate was being
261:
The marquisate was finally restored in 1748, when
William IV managed to establish himself as stadtholder of all the Dutch provinces. It was abolished once again when the Dutch Republic was replaced with the
234:
to accept the sum of 250,000 guilders as compensation for his lost property. He was urged to agree to a compromise whereby he would be granted the marquisate as a fief of
Zeeland, rather than as
199:, who was born six weeks after his father's death. The family sought support not only from the government of Zeeland but also from the governments of the rest of the
203:. The latter were not inclined to interfere with Zeeland's internal affairs. In 1722, the government of Zeeland was so eager to prevent William from becoming
588:
25:
Coats of arms corresponding to the titles borne by various Dutch monarchs, including Veere and
Flushing (right above the bottom crowned arms), displayed at
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250:
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and conspired to grant the marquisate to King
Frederick. The States of Zeeland were informed of the conspiracy and the plan failed.
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first cousins of
William III and great-grandsons of William the Silent, claimed the inheritance. Frederick thought himself the
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bought it in 1582, intending the marquisate for his second son, Maurice. Thus he also acquired two more votes in the
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127:, sovereign of the Netherlands, bought it in 1567. The marquisate, however, fell into arrears in its dues to the
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Nassau en de macht van Oranje: de strijd van de Friese
Nassaus voor erkenning van hun rechten, 1702–1747
399:
393:
246:
320:
183:
but John
William Friso was the designated heir in William III's will. Upon William III's death, the
429:
Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation, Volumes 1–3
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Prince John William Friso struggled to obtain the marquisate until he drowned in 1711; his widow,
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in 1795, only to be restored for the second time in 1814. Since then, it has been held by the
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The abolition was delayed for a decade, and was only done when William IV's long dispute with
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that it started considering abolition of the marquisate. His mother and maternal grandfather,
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8:
613:
515:
The Treaties of the War of the Spanish Succession: An Historical and Critical Dictionary
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73:
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81:
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211:, protested in vain to the States-General, executors of William III's will.
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borne by the monarchs. The present holder of the title Marquis of Veere is
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123:. The new titleholder was heavily indebted and had to sell the marquisate.
119:, his distant relative. Maximilian was succeeded by his sister Anna's son,
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In 1743, the desperate Prince William IV asked his father-in-law,
72:, who had by then ruled as Lord of Veere. After being held by the
53:
465:
The Princes of Orange: The Stadholders in the Dutch Republic
135:, to Philip himself, as he was Count of Zeeland) due to the
561:"Willem-Alexander ook Markies van Veere en Vlissingen"
539:"The Netherlands: Princely and Royal Style: 1813–2013"
425:
Deutscher, Thomas Brian; Bietenholz, Peter G. (2003).
258:'s internal politics on William's behalf ever again.
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created the title in 1555 for his distant relative,
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195:, then took up the cause in the name of their son,
115:in recognition of his 25 years of loyal service to
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46:titles of the kings and queens of the Netherlands
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362:, but only as a title of historic significance.
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589:1555 establishments in the Holy Roman Empire
143:ordered the marquisate to be sold publicly.
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358:The title was restored as part of the full
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173:Prince John William Friso of Orange-Dietz
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280:King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands
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193:Landgravine Marie Louise of Hesse-Kassel
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16:One of the titles of the Dutch monarch
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406:Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands
295:Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands
231:King Frederick William I of Prussia
209:Landgrave Charles I of Hesse-Kassel
13:
553:
513:Frey, Linda; Frey, Marsha (1995).
14:
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84:, it definitively passed to the
604:Marquessates of the Netherlands
433:. University of Toronto Press.
247:King George II of Great Britain
42:Markies van Veere en Vlissingen
517:. Greenwood Publishing Group.
382:William III of the Netherlands
1:
619:Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
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388:Wilhelmina of the Netherlands
376:William II of the Netherlands
97:Creation, sales and purchases
34:Marquis of Veere and Flushing
594:Noble titles created in 1555
370:William I of the Netherlands
360:style of the Dutch sovereign
141:Court of Holland and Zeeland
117:Holy Roman Emperor Charles V
66:Holy Roman Emperor Charles V
7:
599:Monarchy of the Netherlands
485:Bruggeman, Marijke (2007).
309:Maximilien de Hénin-Liétard
215:Abolitions and restorations
197:Prince William IV of Orange
169:King Frederick I of Prussia
165:King William III of England
121:Maximilien de Hénin-Liétard
52:referring to the cities of
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463:Rowen, Herbert H. (1990).
400:Beatrix of the Netherlands
394:Juliana of the Netherlands
159:William the Silent's last
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327:Frederick Henry of Orange
111:The title was granted to
467:. Cambridge Univ. Press.
489:. Uitgeverij Verloren.
125:King Philip II of Spain
50:Dutch title of nobility
624:Frederick I of Prussia
339:William III of England
303:Maximilian of Burgundy
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113:Maximilian of Burgundy
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86:House of Orange-Nassau
70:Maximilian of Burgundy
60:, in the southwestern
48:. It was originally a
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345:William IV of Orange
333:William II of Orange
224:William IV of Orange
167:, who died in 1702.
155:Inheritance disputes
351:William V of Orange
80:and claimed by the
563:(in Dutch). pzc.nl
541:. archontology.com
315:Philip II of Spain
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145:William the Silent
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321:Maurice of Orange
286:List of marquises
264:Batavian Republic
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149:States of Zeeland
129:County of Zeeland
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565:. Retrieved
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274:, as one of
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240:expropriated
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181:heir general
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137:Dutch Revolt
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29:in Amsterdam
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398:1980–2013:
392:1948–1980:
386:1890–1948:
380:1849–1890:
374:1840–1849:
368:1814–1840:
349:1751–1795:
343:1748–1751:
337:1650–1702:
331:1647–1650:
325:1625–1647:
319:1582–1625:
313:1567–1582:
301:1555–1558:
276:many titles
272:Netherlands
205:stadtholder
161:patrilineal
62:Netherlands
27:Nieuwe Kerk
614:Vlissingen
583:Categories
524:0313278849
440:0802085776
412:References
58:Vlissingen
567:6 August
545:6 August
236:freehold
177:cognatic
270:of the
175:, both
92:History
78:England
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493:
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307:1558:
609:Veere
54:Veere
38:Dutch
569:2013
547:2013
519:ISBN
491:ISBN
435:ISBN
254:the
171:and
133:i.e.
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.