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Princess Marie von Wied (1831-1910) (The Netherlands)

Last modified: 2018-12-15 by rob raeside
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[Princess Marie von Wied] image by Mark Sensen, 25 Mar 2004
Adopted 27 August 1908 See also:

Princess Marie von Wied (1831-1910)

The flag of Princess-Widow von Wied (Princess Marie) - was an orange field swallowtailed with a blue cross, and in top and bottom of the hoist a hunting horn; in the center of the cross the Dutch arms.

Willem Frederik Karel, prince of the Netherlands, was the son of king Willem I and Wilhelmina of Prussia (1797-1881). He married Louise of Prussia in 1825 (and was colloquially known as "Fritz", because he was born in the room of Frederick the Great of Prussia.) When his father abdicated in 1840 Fritz renounced all public duties. However he was promoted to Fieldmarshal in 1840, and was a mediator in nearly all family quarrels of the oranges after that. He had two children: Frederik (died 1846) and Wilhelmina Frederika Anna Elisabeth Maria, Princess of Oranje-Nassau (1831-1910). A nice girl, but not attractive enough to become Queen of England, and deaf. She married the Count von Wied. Wilhelm von Wied was prepared for the position of Consort to the Queen of the Netherlands (or the position of King), as Marie's relatives swiftly disappeared because of incest and a rather licentious lifestyle. While her father, Fritz, was the godfather of Wilhelmina, Marie was present at the baptism of Juliana in 1909. That was the moment on which she was robbed of the Dutch crown. In 1922 it was decided by the Dutch government, that only descendants of Wilhelmina were entitled to rule the Netherlands.
Her second son, Willem, was in 1914 for a few months Prince of Albania.
Source: "Oranje-Nassau, een biografisch woordenboek", by Reinilda van Ditzhuyzen, 1998.
Jarig Bakker, 25 Mar 2004