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Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau

Princess Pauline
Paulina van Oranje.jpg
Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau
Born 1 March 1800
Berlin
Died 22 December 1806(1806-12-22) (aged 6)
Freienwalde
Burial since 1911 Royal Crypt, Nieuwe Kerk, Delft
prev. Freienwalde
Full name
Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Pauline Charlotte
House Orange-Nassau
Father William I of the Netherlands
Mother Wilhelmine of Prussia
Full name
Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Pauline Charlotte

Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau (Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Pauline Charlotte; 1 March 1800 – 22 December 1806) was a Princess of the House of Orange-Nassau.

Pauline was born in Berlin while her parents were living in exile during the time the Low Countries were occupied by France. She was the third child and first-born daughter of the later King William I of the Netherlands and his wife, Wilhelmine of Prussia. Her two older brothers were the future King William II and Prince Frederick of the Netherlands. Her parents had another, stillborn, child in 1795. Her younger sister, Marianne, was born four years after her death.

In 1803 Pauline and her family moved to the Nassau family estates in Germany. Here she met her paternal grandparents for the first time. They quickly became fond of her, and Pauline's grandfather William V nicknamed her Polly. Particularly her grandfather was very happy to see her, because none of the recent Nassau-Orange rulers had seen a granddaughter in their lifetime. During a ball in celebration of the birthday of Princess Pauline's father, the old obese ex-Prince danced with Pauline in the grand ballroom of the castle. From 1804 the family lived with William V in Berlin, where he had bought a palace on the Unter den Linden (No. 36). The palace is known as the Niederländische Palais(the Netherlands Palace). At the age of five, she and her older brothers began to spend more time with their grandparents in Oranienstein. In August 1806, her parents had another stillborn son.

Berlin was occupied by the French on 27 October 1806 and Küstrin on 1 November. The Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher finally capitulated on 7 November. Her father, who had become a prisoner of war after the Battle of Jena-Auerstedt on 14 October, was released on this occasion.


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