Anonymous ID: 866c39 March 6, 2020, 6:03 a.m. No.8332325   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2428

>>8332171

Interdasting that Orange is also a town in southern France, on the Rhône River, home of the ancestors of the Dutch royal house.

 

Now that’s dig which relates back to the Hapsburgs and much royal fuckery.

 

https://translate.google.com/#view=home&op=translate&sl=auto&tl=ja&text=orange

Anonymous ID: 866c39 March 6, 2020, 7:06 a.m. No.8332625   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2679 >>2682 >>2712

>>8332428

Q’s -‘ The silent war continues’ could have more than 1 meaning. The Queen of England may have had her strings cut, but we have heard nothing from. Q about the Dutch Royalty. They tie in all Royal houses, Netherlands, Germany, France, English, Prussia. Maybe the war with them continues as they head the Cabal?

Maybe tied to William The Silent of Orange

William the Silent (Willem I) was the first stadtholder of the Dutch Republic and the most significant representative of the House of Orange in the Netherlands. He was count of a portion of the German territory of Nassau and heir to some of his father's fiefs in Holland. William obtained more extensive lands in the Netherlands (the lordship of Breda and several other dependencies) as an inheritance from his cousin René of Châlon, Prince of Orange, when William was only 11 years old. After William's assassination in 1584, the title passed to his son Philip William (who had been held hostage in Spain until 1596), and after his death in 1618, to his second son Maurice, and finally to his youngest son, Frederick Henry.

 

The title of Prince of Orange became associated with the stadtholder of the Netherlands.

 

William III (Willem III) was also King of England, Scotland and Ireland, and his legacy is commemorated annually by the Protestant Orange Order. William's mother, Mary, was the daughter of King Charles I of England and therefore a princess of England as well as Princess of Orange by marriage.

 

William III and Mary II had no legitimate children. After William's death in 1702, his heir in the Netherlands was John William Friso of Nassau-Diez, who assumed the title, King William having bequeathed it to him by testament. The other contender was the King in Prussia, who based his claim to the title on the will of Frederick Henry, William III's grandfather. Eventually, a compromise was reached by which both families were entitled to bear the title of Prince of Orange. By then, it was no more than a title because the principality had been annexed by Louis XIV of France.

 

Friso's line held it as their principal title during the 18th century. The French army expelled them from the Netherlands in 1795, but on their return, the Prince of Orange became the first sovereign of the Netherlands in 1813.

 

After the establishment of the current Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1815, the title was partly reconstitutionalized by legislation and granted to the eldest son of King William I of the Netherlands, Prince William, who later became William II of the Netherlands. Since 1983, the heir to the Dutch throne, whether male or female, bears the title Prince or Princess of Orange.[31] The first-born child of the heir to the Dutch throne bears the title Hereditary Prince(ss) of Orange.[32] When her father Willem-Alexander became King of the Netherlands following the abdication of Queen Beatrix, Princess Catharina-Amalia became the Princess of Orange.