Koninklijk erfgoed van het verlies. Het Haagse Willemsparkhof in negentiende-eeuwse Europese context

In contrast to other European countries 19th century-court architecture in the Netherlands has not left a strong imprint on public memory. Just as most historical cities, most palaces in the Netherlands were restored in 17th century Dutch Classicist Style, suggesting that after the Golden Age nothin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bulletin van de Kon. Ned. Oudheidkundige Bond 2010-10, Vol.109 (5), p.172-189
1. Verfasser: Laarse, Rob van der
Format: Artikel
Sprache:dut ; eng
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Zusammenfassung:In contrast to other European countries 19th century-court architecture in the Netherlands has not left a strong imprint on public memory. Just as most historical cities, most palaces in the Netherlands were restored in 17th century Dutch Classicist Style, suggesting that after the Golden Age nothing happened. This article shows that such an impression is misleading. Focusing on the new monarchy of the Restoration era (1813-1848) it becomes clear that the first Orange kings William I and II started impressive building campaigns in both the Southern and Northern Netherlands, comparable to those of the 17th century.Prince Frederick Henry and the Anglo-Dutch King-Stadtholder William III. Remarkably, in the early 19th century the most magnificent palaces in neoclassicist style - except for Soestdijk - were built by the prince royal in and around Brussels. Nevertheless, the Belgian revolution of 1830 ended the role of the Orange dynasty in Brussels, after which royal and princely palaces, summer houses, and art collections were appropriated by the new Belgian monarchy. Although most of them are still in use, their origin has been completely forgotten. Strangely, this also happened to King William II's new palaces of the 1830s and 1840s in Windsor Tudor Style. This so-called William II Gothic was very popular at the time, but from the 1870s no longer fashionable in Protestant court circles after having been appropriated by Roman-Catholic architects for church building. The King was influenced by the memory of his Oxford college days, as can still be seen in the Gothic Hall of his Kneuterdijk Palace in The Hague, designed by himself as a Painting Gallery modelled after the hall of Christ Church College.A much larger project, however, the so-called Zorgvliet Palace at his huge private domain Williams Park between his The Hague palaces and the beach of Scheveningen, had a different origin. With the help of the English architect Ashton, the King made plans for a residential palace that would surpass his lost Brussels palaces and compete with the royal 'court scapes' of Versailles, Windsor and Potsdam. Connected by kinship and marriage to the Hohenzollern, William II shared the Prussian longing for castellated palaces as developed by Schinkel for his sisters, brothers and nephews in Germany. Nevertheless, palace building was stopped abruptly after the liberal revolution of 1848, when the Orange court lost its political power and almost went bankrupt because of oversp
ISSN:0166-0470
2589-3343
DOI:10.7480/knob.109.2010.5.75