Crown of the Netherlands

Crown of the Netherlands
Official Dutch Crown of 1840

The current Crown of the Netherlands is of relatively modern origin. In 1813 the new "Sovereign Ruler" of the Netherlands, Prince William of Orange, son and heir of the exiled Stadtholder William V of Orange was sworn in Amsterdam. There was no crown present at the ceremony.[1]

When, in 1815, William was proclaimed "King of the Netherlands" in Brussels, he was not crowned but there was a crown present, a huge and unusable construction of gilded copper, pearls made of pasted fishskin and colored glass. The four holes in the ring, the peculiar size and the lack of a bill in the accounts that do contain the jeweler's bill for the gilded silver orb and sceptre suggest that it was the old "funeral crown", used by the Stadtholders in the 18th century and then tied to a cushion on top of the coffin when driven to the vault in Delft. This crown still exists. It may have been used for royal funerals in the 19th century.[2]

The Dutch College of Arms (the "Hoge Raad van Adel") approved of a new royal coat of arms with crown on 24 August 1815.[3] From then on, the heraldic crown and the actual crown would differ.

The heraldic crown was described as "a bejeweled golden ring with golden fleurons and pearls, eight rising arches studded with pearls and topped with an orb with a cross. The crown is not lined with velvet."[4]

In 1840, King William I abdicated and a new crown was made. This small crown contains no real diamonds or pearls. It was made of gilded silver, balls covered with fish skin and glass with coloured foil behind it. The lining was made of red silk. William II and his successors chose not to wear it, but to leave it on a special table during the ceremony when both king and parliament take the oath.[5] The crown was used in royal funerals.

In 1898, 24 of the 74 pearls were removed as the crown was prepared for the installation of Queen Wilhelmina. The crown has not changed since then. It was the monarch's private property until 1963. It was given to a foundation controlled by the Royal family and has never been on display, except for the investitures of 1898, 1948, 1980, a funeral in 1934 and an exhibition in 1990.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Theater van Staat", catalogue of the exhibition in Rijksmuseum Paleis het Loo,1990.
  2. ^ René Brus in "De juwelen van het Huis Oranje-Nassau, Haarlem 1996.
  3. ^ Hubert de Vries,"Wapens van de Nederlanden", Amsterdam 1995.
  4. ^ translation of the Royal Decree of 1815
  5. ^ René Brus
  6. ^ René Brus.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • The Netherlands —     The Netherlands     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The Netherlands     (Germ. Niederlande; Fr. Pays Bas).     The Netherlands, or Low Countries, as organized by Charles V, under whom the Burgundian era ended, comprised practically the territory… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Constitution of the Netherlands — Netherlands This article is part of the series: Politics and government of the Netherlands …   Wikipedia

  • Beatrix of the Netherlands — Beatrix Queen Beatrix in 2008 Queen of the Netherlands Reign 30 April 1980 – present Predecessor …   Wikipedia

  • Monarchy of the Netherlands — Monarch of Kingdom of the Netherlands Monarchy Federal …   Wikipedia

  • Louise of the Netherlands — Infobox Swedish Royalty|majesty|consort name =Louise of the Netherlands title =Queen consort of Sweden and Norway caption = reign =July 8, 1859 March 30, 1871 spouse =Charles XV issue =Louise, Queen of Denmark Prince Carl Oscar, Duke of… …   Wikipedia

  • Juliana of the Netherlands — For the airport of the same name, see Princess Juliana International Airport. Juliana Juliana in 1963 Queen of the Netherlands Reign …   Wikipedia

  • 2007 in the Netherlands — See also: 2006 in the Netherlands, other events of 2007, 2008 in the Netherlands EventsJanuary*January 1: A redivision of local government in North Holland, South Holland, Gelderland and Limburg comes into effect. Twenty four existing… …   Wikipedia

  • Kingdom of the Netherlands — For the country called Netherlands within the Kingdom, see Netherlands. Kingdom of the Netherlands Koninkrijk der Nederlanden (Dutch) Keninkryk fan de Nederlannen (West Frisian) …   Wikipedia

  • Provinces of the Netherlands — …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of the Netherlands — Currency Euro Fiscal year calendar year Trade organisations EU, WTO and OECD Statistics GDP …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”