William_V_of_Orange William_V_of_Orange

William V of Orange - Definition and Overview

William V, stadtholder of The Netherlands (March 8, 1748April 9, 1806), also known as William V of Orange, was the last Stadtholder of the Dutch Republic. He was the leader of the conservative faction.

William V was born at The Hague, the son of William IV of Nassau.

He was only 3 years old when his father passed away in 1751. William V assumed the position of stadtholder (chief executive and military commander) in 1766 after a long regency, first by his mother, and then by the German Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Willem oversaw a serious political decline of the Dutch Republic.

In 1776, his nation was the first country to give official recognition to the newly independent United States. His policy, inspired by wealthy Dutch merchants seeking to benefit in the New World at the expense of England, and the development of close ties with England's former colony, created a deep rift that led to war with England in 1780.

After four years, the Dutch were defeated and an impoverished nation grew restless over William's rule. A band of young revolutionaries was challenging his authority. William V responded in 1787 by having his powerful brother-in-law, King Frederick William II of Prussia send in an army to attack the dissidents. These young revolutionaries fled to France in time to see the overthrow of King Louis XVI of France and the rise of "people power." The year 1795 was a disastrous one for the Netherlands. The Dutch East India Company, rocked by a scandal of corruption and theft, had to declare bankruptcy.

Supported by the French Army, the revolutionaries returned from Paris to fight in the Netherlands and in 1795 William V fled to the safety of his former enemy, England. The last of the Dutch stadtholders, he died in exile at Braunschweig (Brunswick), Germany.

In 1813, his son, William would return to the Netherlands and become king.

Example Usage of William

LIMEIRA2010: "NÃO É MERECEDOR DO FAVO DE MEL AQUELE QUE EVITA A COLMEIA PORQUE AS ABELHAS TÊM FERRÕES. (William SHAKESPEARE)" LIMEIRA (PSC)
MonasCozta: The Smiths - William, It Was Really Nothing http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZkBADymbqU
midnightwriter1: The important thing in science is not so much to obtain new facts as to discover new ways of thinking about them. -Sir William Bragg #quote
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